<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057229_0001"/>
"Were it left to me<lb/>
to decide whether<lb/>
we should have a<lb/>
government without<lb/>
newspapers or<lb/>
newspapers without<lb/>
government, I<lb/>
should not hesitate<lb/>
a moment to prefer<lb/>
the latter<lb/>
?Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
If you have a story<lb/>
idea, a tip, or a<lb/>
lead, please tele-<lb/>
phone us:<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
757-6367<lb/>
757-6309<lb/>
o?l<lb/>
Vol. 54 No.<lb/>
12 pages today<lb/>
Tuesday, November 6,1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Legislature<lb/>
narrowly<lb/>
OK's funds<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The SGA transit budget passed by a narrow margin<lb/>
at the legislature meeting held yesterday.<lb/>
With a vote of 25 for and 21 against with one<lb/>
abstention, the legislature passed the $70,504.50 transit<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
Controversy arose as to whether some members of<lb/>
the legislature completely understood the budget and<lb/>
whether the understood the procedures of Robert's<lb/>
Rules of Order<lb/>
"That was pitiful said Nicky Francis, President of<lb/>
the SGA Executive Council. "That was an appropriate<lb/>
example of confusion, misinterpretations and an overall<lb/>
fiasco<lb/>
Also according to Francis, "Robert's Rules of Order<lb/>
were ignored and abused<lb/>
Supporting the bill, Cheryl Felbinger said she felt<lb/>
that the transit managers were more qualified to decide<lb/>
how much they need.<lb/>
Another member of the legislature, Jeff Triplett, said<lb/>
"I think it sucks. We gave them too much<lb/>
The budget had been changed twice since its original<lb/>
conception, and Transit Manager Leonard Fleming was<lb/>
not happy with one of the changes.<lb/>
When congratulated after the meeting, Fleming<lb/>
expressed strong disappointment that the escrow<lb/>
account had been cut from the budget.<lb/>
The escrow account would have allowed the eventual<lb/>
buying of another bus and now "allows no provisions for<lb/>
a new bus according to Fleming.<lb/>
See BUDGET, page 2<lb/>
Judge bars<lb/>
families from<lb/>
first hearing<lb/>
By WILLIAM M. WELCH<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
Families of men charged in Saturday's Greensboro shootings pictured here<lb/>
under guard) have been barred from preliminary court proceedings.<lb/>
Greenville civic groups lay down<lb/>
battle lines in their War on Winter<lb/>
Battle lines have been<lb/>
drawn. The first major<lb/>
attack in the War on<lb/>
Winter will take place<lb/>
Saturday, November 10,<lb/>
when volunteers from<lb/>
churches, clubs and the<lb/>
general community begin<lb/>
home weatherization and<lb/>
woodcutting for the elderly<lb/>
and disabled who need<lb/>
help.<lb/>
The Old Fire Station on<lb/>
West Chestnut will be<lb/>
battle headquarters for the<lb/>
weatherization teams. Vol-<lb/>
unteers are urged to meet<lb/>
at 9:00 a.m. for work<lb/>
assignments and to bring<lb/>
tools such as hammers,<lb/>
screwdrivers, scrapers,<lb/>
ladders, caulking guns,<lb/>
and staplers. Workers will<lb/>
caulk and weatherstrip<lb/>
windows and doors, install<lb/>
plastic over windows, and<lb/>
make other improvements<lb/>
to weatherproof homes.<lb/>
Woodcutters will meet<lb/>
at 8:30 a.m. at the Pitt-<lb/>
Greenville Airport Ground<lb/>
Station. Everyone having<lb/>
woodcutting equipment<lb/>
and pickup trucks is<lb/>
requested to bring them.<lb/>
Materials for the<lb/>
weatherization project are<lb/>
being furnished by local<lb/>
businesses and through<lb/>
contributions from the<lb/>
community and various<lb/>
organizations. Snacks and<lb/>
lunches for workers will<lb/>
also be provided by local<lb/>
restaurants.<lb/>
War on Winter is being<lb/>
waged as a joint effort by<lb/>
The Greenville Energy<lb/>
Program and The Junior<lb/>
Woman's Club of Green-<lb/>
ville as part of November<lb/>
Energy Conservation<lb/>
Month activities. The War<lb/>
is aimed at informing the<lb/>
community about ways to<lb/>
save energy by making<lb/>
home improvements that<lb/>
will give more protection<lb/>
from the cold months<lb/>
ahead. The volunteer pro-<lb/>
ject will assist in making<lb/>
the improvements for<lb/>
those older people who<lb/>
physically and financially<lb/>
cannot make the improve-<lb/>
ments for themselves.<lb/>
Volunteers from ECU<lb/>
include several organiza-<lb/>
tions: Lambda Chi Alpha,<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda, Social<lb/>
Work and Corrections<lb/>
Club and other indivi-<lb/>
duals. Student groups<lb/>
from Pitt Community Col-<lb/>
lege and Agnes Fullilove<lb/>
Community School, and<lb/>
church and community<lb/>
organizations have offered<lb/>
to help.<lb/>
According to Mrs. Pri-<lb/>
vette, the major needs at<lb/>
this time include sufficient<lb/>
workers and tools to<lb/>
perform the weatherization<lb/>
and woodcutting and ad-<lb/>
ditional donations of ma-<lb/>
terials and money for<lb/>
supply purchases. Contri-<lb/>
butions can be sent to<lb/>
P.O. Box 8083, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834, and should be<lb/>
made payable to the<lb/>
Junior Woman's Club<lb/>
Energy Conservation De-<lb/>
partment. Arrangements<lb/>
for materials or volunteers<lb/>
can be made with Mrs.<lb/>
Privette at 756-9086 oi<lb/>
752-5725.<lb/>
Everyone in the com-<lb/>
munity is invited to help<lb/>
fight this battle against<lb/>
the coming cold weather.<lb/>
With the cost of heating<lb/>
fuels rising, many older<lb/>
people on limited incomes<lb/>
will face a serious problem<lb/>
of heating their homes this<lb/>
winter. For some it may<lb/>
be a choice of having fuel<lb/>
or food and medicines.<lb/>
Everyone's help is needed;<lb/>
every contribution will be<lb/>
appreciated.<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) ? Family<lb/>
members of some of the men charged in a<lb/>
multiple slaying at an anti-Ku Klux Klan<lb/>
rally during the weekend waited outside<lb/>
the courtroom Monday, blocked from<lb/>
watching as the suspects made a first<lb/>
court appearance.<lb/>
District Court Judge Robert Cecil<lb/>
allowed lawyers, court personnel and<lb/>
news reporters into a courtroom for the<lb/>
morning-long hearing in which attorneys<lb/>
were appointed and bond was denied for<lb/>
the 14 men.<lb/>
"It makes me mad. They've got all<lb/>
kinds of rights and laws, but we ain't got<lb/>
no right to see our son said William<lb/>
Clinton of Lincolnton. His son, Michael<lb/>
Eugene Clinton, faces murder and<lb/>
conspiracy charges.<lb/>
With the elder Clinton were the<lb/>
defendant's wife, Karen, 20, and his aunt,<lb/>
Ann Propst. Clinton said he was unable to<lb/>
get word to his son that a private lawyer<lb/>
had been hired before Michael Clinton<lb/>
asked the judge to name a court-appointed<lb/>
attorney.<lb/>
Members of the families of at least two<lb/>
other defendants, Terry Wayne Hartsoe,<lb/>
19, of Hickory and David Wayne<lb/>
Matthews, 24, of Newton, also were at the<lb/>
courthouse.<lb/>
The defendants have not been allowed<lb/>
visitors since their arrests. Court officials<lb/>
said none would be able to see their<lb/>
families until regular jail visiting hours on<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
The defendants, handcuffed in pairs,<lb/>
were kept away from persons inside the<lb/>
courthouse by dozens of sheriffs deputies<lb/>
and Greensboro police. <lb/>
unusual, especially in Guilford County<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Cecil, in an interview after the<lb/>
hearings, said the size of the courtroom<lb/>
and the need for security prompted him to<lb/>
exclude the general public.<lb/>
"Secondly, I don't know how many<lb/>
family members are here. And thirdly, !<lb/>
don't know who is a family member<lb/>
Cecil said.<lb/>
Will make efforts<lb/>
"Because a family can't get in doesn't<lb/>
mean it's not an open hearing. We let all<lb/>
the reporters with press cards in he<lb/>
added. "It's not completely open, but we<lb/>
don't have the facilities to have everybody<lb/>
with some isolated interest in the case to<lb/>
come in. If we did, we'd have to rent the<lb/>
Greensboro Coliseum<lb/>
Cecil said he would "make efforts" to<lb/>
allow family members in for the<lb/>
defendants' probable-cause hearing Nov.<lb/>
20. But he said he may limit the number<lb/>
of family members allowed in.<lb/>
Surprise<lb/>
Unusual<lb/>
District Attorney Michael Schlosser<lb/>
said it was unusual for families to be<lb/>
denied access to the courtroom for a<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
"In a crime of this magnitude, it is<lb/>
The families expressed surprise at<lb/>
their relatives' involvement, and none<lb/>
acknowledged knowing of any KKK<lb/>
involvement.<lb/>
"This is the first time he's ever done<lb/>
anything like this said Karen Clinton,<lb/>
who has two children, 4 and 16 months.<lb/>
Her husband is an electrical worker in<lb/>
Lincolnton.<lb/>
"He just got in with some bad guys<lb/>
and got into this she said.<lb/>
Clinton's aunt, Mrs. Propst, said "He<lb/>
didn't even own a gun. He hasn't ever<lb/>
been in any trouble<lb/>
Maynard Witherspoon of Hickory, who<lb/>
said he was the father of Hartsoe, said,<lb/>
"He couldn't have done it. He's just a<lb/>
kid<lb/>
Craig Matthews, whose son is David<lb/>
Wayne Matthews, would not comment on<lb/>
whether his son had any KKK connection.<lb/>
"That's something I can't reveal he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Morgan worried over Helms'<lb/>
endorsement of John East<lb/>
Dr. John East<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) -<lb/>
John East, who has<lb/>
decided to run for the U.S.<lb/>
Senate next year, is<lb/>
virtually unknown to North<lb/>
Carolina voters. But the<lb/>
fact that he has the<lb/>
endorsement of Repub-<lb/>
lican Sen. Jesse Helms<lb/>
has incumbent Sen. Robert<lb/>
Morgan worried.<lb/>
East, a Republican<lb/>
science professor at East<lb/>
Carolina University since<lb/>
1964, plans to challenge<lb/>
Democrat Morgan next<lb/>
year. So far no other<lb/>
Republicans are opposing<lb/>
him for the nomination.<lb/>
Morgan's taking him<lb/>
seriously because of Re-<lb/>
publican Helms' endorse-<lb/>
ment, which means finan-<lb/>
cial backing. During his<lb/>
1978 campaign, Helms<lb/>
raised $7 million, nearly<lb/>
10 times as much as<lb/>
Morgan raised during his<lb/>
1974 election.<lb/>
Morgan said the money<lb/>
he expects East to get<lb/>
from the Helms organiza-<lb/>
tion could be a factor in<lb/>
the race.<lb/>
"They'll pour a lot of<lb/>
dollars in there said<lb/>
Sally Swift, a campaign<lb/>
worker for Morgan.<lb/>
"When you've got the<lb/>
money, you can be put<lb/>
before the public<lb/>
East, 48, who ap-<lb/>
parently shares Helms'<lb/>
conservative convictions,<lb/>
says he will take issue<lb/>
with such Morgan stands<lb/>
as the Panama Canal<lb/>
treaty and Soul City.<lb/>
Observers say he may<lb/>
also try to identify Morgan<lb/>
with the Carter adminis-<lb/>
tration on such issues as<lb/>
its anti-smoking program<lb/>
and efforts to further de-<lb/>
segregate the state 16-<lb/>
campus university system.<lb/>
Morgan says he dis-<lb/>
approves of both pro-<lb/>
grams, but East said he<lb/>
shares the blame because<lb/>
he has "embraced Car-<lb/>
ter<lb/>
East is a native of<lb/>
Springfield, 111. He has<lb/>
been confined to a wheel-<lb/>
chair since he contracted<lb/>
polio while serving at<lb/>
Camp Lejeune with the<lb/>
Marines in 1955.<lb/>
In 1966 he ran un-<lb/>
successfully for Congress<lb/>
against Walter Jones and<lb/>
in 1968 he drew 48 percent<lb/>
of the vote in his un-<lb/>
successful bid to unseat<lb/>
Secretary of State Thad<lb/>
Eure.<lb/>
Joyner library-<lb/>
studying longer<lb/>
hours request<lb/>
An extension of library<lb/>
benefit tight-scheduled<lb/>
hours would et<lb/>
working students.<lb/>
By MARY RIDER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An informal investiga-<lb/>
tion to determine the<lb/>
possibility of extending<lb/>
library hours at Joyner is<lb/>
currently being under-<lb/>
taken, according to Dr.<lb/>
Eugene A. Brunelle, Di-<lb/>
rector of the Library.<lb/>
The question of ex-<lb/>
tending library hours arose<lb/>
during a recent SGA<lb/>
meeting, when Nicky<lb/>
Francis, president of the<lb/>
graduate class, asked<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas Brewer<lb/>
about the possibility of<lb/>
longer library hours on<lb/>
weekends.<lb/>
Francis stated that<lb/>
many graduate students<lb/>
work and have families,<lb/>
and must use Joyner<lb/>
Library primarily during<lb/>
the weekends.<lb/>
Dr. Brewer replied that<lb/>
if a problem did exist, he<lb/>
would want to see utili-<lb/>
sation studies done before<lb/>
he could consider extend-<lb/>
ing the hours.<lb/>
Francis later met with<lb/>
Dr. Eugene A. Brunelle,<lb/>
director of the library, and<lb/>
discussed the extension of<lb/>
hours. Brunelle and Dr.<lb/>
Wilson Luquire, bis asso-<lb/>
ciate, explained that the<lb/>
library wiH do everything<lb/>
possible to cooperate.<lb/>
In separate interviews<lb/>
both Brunelle and Francis<lb/>
stressed the library staffs<lb/>
willingness to serve the<lb/>
students, noting that re-<lb/>
search on the problem is<lb/>
currently being under-<lb/>
taken.<lb/>
When the memo was<lb/>
sent from the chancellor's<lb/>
office to the library con-<lb/>
cerning the possible ex-<lb/>
tension of hours, the<lb/>
library staff conducted a<lb/>
survey of five other<lb/>
educational institutions to<lb/>
compare their library<lb/>
hours to Joyner's. ECU's<lb/>
library is open 94 hours a<lb/>
week, which is five and a<lb/>
half hours longer than the<lb/>
library at North Carolina<lb/>
State University and three<lb/>
hours longer than the one<lb/>
at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
However, the libraries at<lb/>
Duke, Pincetou, and the<lb/>
University of South Caro-<lb/>
lina are open longer than<lb/>
ECU's.<lb/>
The staff is trying to<lb/>
maintain or expand their<lb/>
services in the face of<lb/>
inflation which has hit the<lb/>
libraries extremely hard,<lb/>
said Brunelle. According<lb/>
to a survey last year the<lb/>
inflation rate for library<lb/>
purposes was almost dou-<lb/>
See LIBRARY, page 2<lb/>
U<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 6 November 1979<lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
Phi Taus congratulate new Little Sisters<lb/>
By RICK GLIARMIS<lb/>
Greek Correspondent<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Taus<lb/>
held a Halloween Social<lb/>
with the Chi Omegas on<lb/>
Tuesday, Oct. 30. The<lb/>
costumes ranged from Salt<lb/>
and Pepper and Crayola<lb/>
Crayons to Couni Dracula.<lb/>
The Phi Taus would<lb/>
like to congratulate and<lb/>
welcome 15 new Little<lb/>
Sisters to their organi-<lb/>
zation.<lb/>
Upcoming events for<lb/>
the Phi Taus include a<lb/>
soccer game Thursday<lb/>
with the Kappa Alphas<lb/>
and working at the Alumni<lb/>
Association's Telefund<lb/>
with the Alpha Phis this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Last Thursday, the Phi<lb/>
Taus received the Fall<lb/>
Blood Drive Trophy for the<lb/>
fraternity with the most<lb/>
donors during the drive. A<lb/>
total of 35 Phi Taus gave<lb/>
blood.<lb/>
The Pi Kappa Phis<lb/>
upped their soccer record<lb/>
to 3-0 last week after<lb/>
shutting out the Lambda<lb/>
Chis, 3-0. In the second<lb/>
game of the week, things<lb/>
didn't look too promising<lb/>
at half 'me as the Pi Kaps<lb/>
found themselves down<lb/>
2-0. With a gallant effort,<lb/>
three goals by Bruce<lb/>
Mullis and another by<lb/>
Michael Wise, the Pi Kaps<lb/>
fought back to win a 4-2<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
The Sigma Sigma Sig-<lb/>
ma sorority is now selling<lb/>
tickets to its annual Pie<lb/>
Throw which will be held<lb/>
at Chapter X on Nov. 20.<lb/>
Everyone is invited to<lb/>
come out and throw pies<lb/>
at your favorite Sigma.<lb/>
The Sigmas will also be<lb/>
working for the third year<lb/>
at the Tobacco Festival<lb/>
which is being held Nov.<lb/>
14, 15 and 16.<lb/>
Last week the Kappa<lb/>
Deltas celebrated their<lb/>
82nd anniversary. The<lb/>
sorority was founded on<lb/>
Oct. 23, 1897 at Longwood<lb/>
College in Farmville, Vir-<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas ser-<lb/>
enaded and presented a<lb/>
door plaque to the men of<lb/>
Beta Theta Pi fraternity<lb/>
commemorating the move<lb/>
to their new house on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The members of Kappa<lb/>
Delta are busy planning<lb/>
their beach weekend to be<lb/>
held this weekend at<lb/>
Myrtle Beach. A happy<lb/>
hour is also being planned<lb/>
for next week. Details will<lb/>
be in next week's column.<lb/>
Hunnrs<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
TROUT $2.95<lb/>
PERCH $2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No take-outs please.<lb/>
Meal includes:<lb/>
French Fries, Cole slaw,<lb/>
HnihpnppUt.<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
lor your<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Dally 11X30<lb/>
Sun. - Thur.<lb/>
4:30-9:00<lb/>
Fri. and Sat.<lb/>
4:30-10:00<lb/>
The Chi Omegas are<lb/>
looking forward to their<lb/>
Alumni Weekend on Nov.<lb/>
10 and 11. A pig pickin'<lb/>
will be held at the<lb/>
American Legion and Five<lb/>
Degrees South will be<lb/>
playing. After the ball-<lb/>
game, the band will return<lb/>
to entertain sisters, dates<lb/>
and guests.<lb/>
On Sunday, Nov. 11, a<lb/>
breakfast will be held at<lb/>
Ramada Inn to honor the<lb/>
Alumni.<lb/>
The Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Fall Pledge Class is having<lb/>
a Shag Contest at Chapter<lb/>
X on Nov. 13 from &amp;:00<lb/>
p.m. until 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
Advance tickets are 25<lb/>
cents. Tickets at the door<lb/>
will be 50 cents. Door ,<lb/>
prizes will be given away<lb/>
during the night.<lb/>
BUDGET<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
Also, in a friendly amendment to the bill, a change<lb/>
was made so that all monies not used by the transit<lb/>
system this year would revert back to the SGA general<lb/>
fund.<lb/>
A question was also raised concerning the wages of<lb/>
the bus drivers. Drivers have been paid ten cents per<lb/>
hour more than minimum wage requirements. Bus<lb/>
drivers will continue to be paid this amount until<lb/>
January when they will go to a normal minimum wage<lb/>
scale.<lb/>
In other business, the legislature was presented with<lb/>
a request from the ECU Law Society for funding.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth control ana<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For!<lb/>
further information call 832-0535 (toll-l<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568) between!<lb/>
9AM-5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
LIBRARY<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
ble that of the national<lb/>
inflation rate.<lb/>
Dr. Brunelle asked<lb/>
Francis to tajk with other<lb/>
students and to arrive at a<lb/>
general consensus on li-<lb/>
brary hours. If there is<lb/>
clear evidence that a<lb/>
change in hours is neces-<lb/>
sary, said Brunelle, a<lb/>
proposition may be made<lb/>
Support<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
to the SGA.<lb/>
At one time, Joyner<lb/>
Library was open 24 hours<lb/>
a day during exams. It<lb/>
was found, however, that<lb/>
very few people used the<lb/>
library between the hours<lb/>
of 3:00 a.m. and 6 a.m. As<lb/>
a result, the library is now<lb/>
open from 8:00 a.m. to<lb/>
3:00 a.m. on weekdays<lb/>
during exams. The exam<lb/>
schedule begins on De-<lb/>
cember 12 and continues<lb/>
throughout the rest of the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
At present, Joyner<lb/>
Library is open from 8:00<lb/>
a.m. to 12:00 midnight<lb/>
Monday through Thurs-<lb/>
day, 8:00 a.m. to 9:00<lb/>
p.m. on Friday, 9:00 a.m.<lb/>
to 5:00 p.m. on Saturday<lb/>
and 2:00 p.m. to midnight<lb/>
on Sunday.<lb/>
November Specials<lb/>
Lunch 11:00-3:00<lb/>
Moil. Slices of Beef , Toast &amp;<lb/>
Potato ?2.49<lb/>
Tues. Soap &amp; Salad ?1.49<lb/>
Wed. Sirloin Tips, Toast &amp;<lb/>
Potato ?2.49<lb/>
Thill. Old Fashion ?1.49<lb/>
Cheeseburger &amp; Soup<lb/>
Fri. Filet of Chicken Sandwich<lb/>
&amp; Potato ?1.39<lb/>
Sat. Chowder &amp; Salad ?1.79<lb/>
Sun. 6oz. Sirloin , Toast &amp;<lb/>
Potato ?2.49<lb/>
8005 E. 10th St. Greenville 7S8-8550<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4:00 8:00 PM<lb/>
SALAD?50 EXTRA<lb/>
NO CARRYOUT<lb/>
ASST. VAR. ? g g<lb/>
PIZZA. .q"ly <lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
CHICKEN a:<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN t -i q q<lb/>
OrHuHL I I ONLY I HUR<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLE SLAW<lb/>
FRIED $?. 9 9<lb/>
The folks at Kroger Sav-on know the<lb/>
complete student has a party side.<lb/>
too. So they have what East Carolina<lb/>
University students need for any bash<lb/>
. . from party platters to disco plat-<lb/>
ters  all in one convenient loca-<lb/>
tion. Don't be incomplete this<lb/>
year?shop Kroger Sav-on today<lb/>
COSMETICS<lb/>
m<lb/>
WUMWCiS<lb/>
discounted <lb/>
TIMEX<lb/>
WATCHES<lb/>
-j<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Pak<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
SUGGESTED RETAIL<lb/>
LET THE DELI DO IT! Planning a party? Let the<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on Deli supply the fixin's. Finest<lb/>
quality meats, delicious cheese, &amp; tasty<lb/>
salads combine to make our party trays<lb/>
perfect for entertaining. Just phone ahead to<lb/>
place your order!<lb/>
a<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
MscouirfHil xuop<lb/>
FIRE BREWED<lb/>
Stroh's<lb/>
Light<lb/>
Rossetto A fx <lb/>
Lambrusco. .1B5yyq<lb/>
Off<lb/>
MFR<lb/>
SUG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised item Is required to be readily available for<lb/>
?ale In each Kroger Sav-on Store except as specifically noted in this<lb/>
ad. W we do run out of an advertised Item, we will offer you your choice<lb/>
of a comparable Item, when available, reflecting the same savings or a<lb/>
ralncheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item st the<lb/>
advertised price within 30 days.<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
MON<lb/>
THRU<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY<lb/>
9AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GENERAL<lb/>
MERCHANDISE STORES<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE TUES<lb/>
NOV. 6 THRU SUN NOV. 11, 1979<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0003"/><lb/>
llPecpl<lb/>
e1 Iuh. arid ???<lb/>
IV<lb/>
The ECU Law Society<lb/>
will be having a meeting<lb/>
tonight, Nov. 6, at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall room<lb/>
248 (the auditorium up-<lb/>
stair?). We will also be<lb/>
meeting for dinner at 6:30<lb/>
at Western Sizzlin' for<lb/>
those who would like to<lb/>
come. Mr. Alan Pittman, a<lb/>
Campbell Law School<lb/>
graduate now practicing<lb/>
law in Greenville, will be<lb/>
one of the speakers; he<lb/>
will cover such topics as<lb/>
Campbell Law School, the<lb/>
bar exam, and beginning a<lb/>
practice. A faculty repre-<lb/>
sentative from the Ad-<lb/>
missions Office of the<lb/>
Campbell School of Law<lb/>
will also be speaking at<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
6 November 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 3<lb/>
Mjcl<lb/>
Lambda Alpha Epsilon,<lb/>
the American Criminal<lb/>
Justice Association, will<lb/>
hold a mandatory meeting<lb/>
on Nov. 8 at 5 p.m. in<lb/>
Auditorium 101A of the<lb/>
Allied Health building. All<lb/>
applications for new<lb/>
members are due before<lb/>
or at this meeting. Appli-<lb/>
cations may be obtained<lb/>
and returned to the<lb/>
following people: Richard<lb/>
Belthoff (758-4623), Toni<lb/>
Dye (758-4309) or Mr.<lb/>
Campbell in A.H. 312.<lb/>
Please put fee ($26) in a<lb/>
sealed envelope and attach<lb/>
to application. Dues ($20)<lb/>
for old members are also<lb/>
due at this meeting.<lb/>
Topics for meeting: fund<lb/>
raising for planned social<lb/>
with CORSO and Christ-<lb/>
mas basket for needy<lb/>
family. All interested per-<lb/>
sons please attend.<lb/>
eci-ccc<lb/>
The ECU Collegiate<lb/>
Civitan Club will have an<lb/>
organizational meeting at<lb/>
7 p.m. on Nov. 6 in<lb/>
Flanagan 201.<lb/>
The ECU Club is<lb/>
sponsored by the Green-<lb/>
ville Civitan Club.<lb/>
Collegiate Civitan<lb/>
Clubs are dedicated to<lb/>
service to others with<lb/>
special emphasis on men-<lb/>
tal health and mental<lb/>
retardation. Any student<lb/>
carrying 12 semester hours<lb/>
or more is eligible to<lb/>
become a member. For<lb/>
further information, see<lb/>
Dr. R.A. Klein, Flanagan<lb/>
235 or phone 757-6274.<lb/>
On the Hill in the<lb/>
basement meeting room of<lb/>
Scott Hall, a quiet,<lb/>
supervised STUDY HALL<lb/>
is open to anyone who<lb/>
would like to come in and<lb/>
study. It is open Monday,<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
from 8 to 11 p.m.<lb/>
delta<lb/>
The next Sig4 Tau<lb/>
Delta meeting will be held<lb/>
November 14. Terry Davis,<lb/>
author of Vision Quest,<lb/>
will speak.<lb/>
if llil I I )l<lb/>
The Inuamural Council<lb/>
Meeting will be held<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 8 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial Gym,<lb/>
room 104.<lb/>
snea<lb/>
There will be an SNEA<lb/>
Cluster meeting for all<lb/>
area chapters on Nov. 6 at<lb/>
J.H. Rose High School in<lb/>
Greenville. Exhibits will<lb/>
be displayed from 8 a.m.<lb/>
to 1 p.m. All members are<lb/>
encouraged to attend.<lb/>
Ml I ni i <lb/>
All students interested<lb/>
in National Fellowships-<lb/>
Scholarships are invited to<lb/>
attend a presentation by<lb/>
Dr. John Ebbs on Thurs<lb/>
Nov. 8 at 5:30 in 244<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma mem-<lb/>
bers will have a business<lb/>
meeting at 5 in 244, prior<lb/>
to the presentation. Those<lb/>
members who ordered<lb/>
T-shirts are asked to bring<lb/>
money at this time. See<lb/>
you there!<lb/>
I l? l f It ill<lb/>
The ECU Racquetball<lb/>
Club is trying to identify<lb/>
all interested faculty, staff<lb/>
and students. Clinics and<lb/>
tournaments are being<lb/>
planned with competition<lb/>
between schools being<lb/>
scheduled. All interested<lb/>
persons, please contact<lb/>
Nancy Mize, 757-6387, 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
If you like pinball, pool<lb/>
or foosball, the place to be<lb/>
is the MRC GAMEROOM.<lb/>
Located in the basement of<lb/>
Aycock Dorm, it is open<lb/>
from 10 a.m12 p.m.<lb/>
every day. The gameroom<lb/>
also serves as the checkout<lb/>
area for tenls, canoes, car<lb/>
racks and life preservers.<lb/>
Remember, the Men's<lb/>
Residence Council pro-<lb/>
vides these services.<lb/>
?c he! n?r i it etc lafc ff e<lb/>
The James B. Mallory<lb/>
Men's Residence Council<lb/>
scholarship will be award-<lb/>
ed this semester to a<lb/>
young man who is a<lb/>
member of the Men's<lb/>
Residence Council. The<lb/>
scholarship will be based<lb/>
on need and residence hall<lb/>
contributions. Applicants<lb/>
must have at least a 2.5<lb/>
grade point average. Ap-<lb/>
plications may be picked<lb/>
up in each dorm coun-<lb/>
selor's office.<lb/>
The ECU Photo lab has<lb/>
an immediate opening for<lb/>
the position of Staff<lb/>
Photographer. Anyone<lb/>
who is interested in<lb/>
applying for the position<lb/>
should fill out an applica-<lb/>
tion at the office of The<lb/>
East Carolinian in the Old<lb/>
South Building across from<lb/>
the Library.<lb/>
?ufc<lb/>
H i<lb/>
Screenings will be held<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 8, in the<lb/>
SGA Cabinet Room, Men-<lb/>
denhall for SGA ad-<lb/>
ministrative committees.<lb/>
Call for an appointment<lb/>
(757-6611, ext. 218). The<lb/>
following committees need<lb/>
to be filled:<lb/>
Alcohol Drug Educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Soliciting on Campus<lb/>
Residence Life<lb/>
Status of Women<lb/>
Student Health Ser-<lb/>
vices<lb/>
International Student<lb/>
Affairs<lb/>
University Traffic Ap-<lb/>
peals<lb/>
Admissions<lb/>
University Curriculum<lb/>
Library<lb/>
Student Recruitment<lb/>
Career Education<lb/>
Instructional Survey<lb/>
General College<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will meet<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 6, at 3:30<lb/>
p.m. in room 242 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter. All members<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
are<lb/>
law<lb/>
The Law School Ad-<lb/>
mission Test will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday,<lb/>
December 1, 1979. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Prince-<lb/>
ton, N.J. 08540. Regis-<lb/>
tration deadline is Nov. 5,<lb/>
1979. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105.<lb/>
M?tciy<lb/>
RMY-NAVY blORE<lb/>
Backpacks. B 15 Bombei<lb/>
Fi?ld, Dck. Flight, Snorkel<lb/>
Jackets. Peacoats Parkas<lb/>
Shoes, Combat Boots Plus<lb/>
Over 400 Different Gi item<lb/>
 1501 S. Evans Street<lb/>
On Thursday, Nov. 8,<lb/>
there will be a meeting of<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta History<lb/>
Honor Fraternity at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in the Todd Room<lb/>
located in D wing of<lb/>
Brewster. All members are<lb/>
requested to attend.<lb/>
At Barre,<lb/>
LTD.<lb/>
act<lb/>
The American College<lb/>
Testing (ACT) will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on sat Dec. 8.<lb/>
Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed<lb/>
to ACT Registration, P.O.<lb/>
Box 414, Iowa City, Iowa<lb/>
52240. Registration dead-<lb/>
line is Nov. 9. Applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the<lb/>
ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Speignt Building, Room<lb/>
105.<lb/>
bcwllfii<lb/>
Take advantage of<lb/>
these bowling specials at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter: "Red Pin Bowling"?<lb/>
7 p.m. to 10 p.m. every<lb/>
Sunday bowlers get a<lb/>
chance to win one FREE<lb/>
GAME with every game<lb/>
bowled. "Rent-A-Lane"?<lb/>
Every Saturday from noon<lb/>
to 6 p.m. you can rent a<lb/>
lane for $3 for one hour.<lb/>
"Discount Day"?onethird<lb/>
off the price of bowling<lb/>
every Monday from 2 p.m.<lb/>
until 6 p.m.<lb/>
!$ i lanuae<lb/>
cltt<lb/>
ECU Sign Language<lb/>
Club will meet Nov. 8 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
B-236.<lb/>
ecc<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay<lb/>
Community will meet<lb/>
Tuesday at 5 in the<lb/>
Newman House at 608<lb/>
East 9th St.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
805 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
752-5186<lb/>
DANCERS<lb/>
New Shipment Just<lb/>
Arrived<lb/>
?Terry Tights<lb/>
?Ribbed Orion Tights<lb/>
?Straight Leg Jazz Pants<lb/>
?Suspender Stirrup Tight!<lb/>
Distributed By<lb/>
Taylor Beverage Co.<lb/>
Goldaboro<lb/>
I<lb/>
PORTED<lb/>
Heineken<lb/>
HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
THE 1 IMPORTED BEER IN AMERICA.<lb/>
Huronrs<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
X311S. Evans St.<lb/>
LUNCH ONLY<lb/>
Lunch 11:30-230<lb/>
SunThurt. 4:309:00<lb/>
Fri. and Sat. 430-10:00<lb/>
Mon. Ladle's Day-Free trip<lb/>
to salad bar with<lb/>
each full meal<lb/>
Ifies, Ladle's Day<lb/>
Free cup of clam<lb/>
chowder with each<lb/>
full meal<lb/>
Wen. <lb/>
Soup n' Sandwich<lb/>
02.25<lb/>
Soup n' Salad<lb/>
01.7S<lb/>
FrL all the trout you can<lb/>
eat for 01.99 with<lb/>
fries and slaw<lb/>
fiftB. Family Day<lb/>
? Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
Shrimp $495<lb/>
Oysters S4-7S<lb/>
Flounder $3.50<lb/>
Trout $2.95<lb/>
SunThurs. 4:309:00<lb/>
Fri. if 8at.4:30-10:00<lb/>
-  - ? i-<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
The Graduate Record<lb/>
'Examination will be offer-<lb/>
ed at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday,<lb/>
January 12, 1980. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Prince-<lb/>
ton, N.J. 08540. Registra-<lb/>
tion deadline is November<lb/>
28, 1979. Applications may<lb/>
be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105.<lb/>
and<lb/>
L 1 ' rt<lb/>
supb<lb/>
are<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Program Board will meet<lb/>
Tuesday Nov. 6, at 7<lb/>
p.m. in room 212 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cen-<lb/>
ter. All members<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
scec<lb/>
The Student Council<lb/>
for Exceptional Children<lb/>
will meet Wed Nov. 7, in<lb/>
room 129 Speight at 5<lb/>
p.m. All members and all<lb/>
prospective members are<lb/>
asked to attend. Dr.<lb/>
Shiggley from TEACH will<lb/>
be the guest speaker.<lb/>
PART<lb/>
TINE<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
Looking for a part-time<lb/>
job with flexible hours<lb/>
and real business<lb/>
experience? Northwest<lb/>
Mutual Life Ins. Co.<lb/>
has openings for college<lb/>
agents. Call before noon<lb/>
for appointments!<lb/>
7SS-4080<lb/>
I<lb/>
The Look Today is casual, and comfortable <lb/>
whether it be a beautifully styled classic Jacket<lb/>
or a great looking, pair of poplin Trousers. At<lb/>
The Clothes Horse you'll find that we pay<lb/>
particular attention to correct fashion and<lb/>
quality. We like to show you our shop<lb/>
Th<lb/>
BY<lb/>
21? East Fifth<lb/>
S undoy ? Novmbf 4<lb/>
f :00 P.M.<lb/>
GotfMM Concert ? Hoorix Tnootro<lb/>
7:00 P.M.<lb/>
Mowdoy ? Novmbf 5<lb/>
0:00 PM.<lb/>
Uctwra: "Who Kilted Merita lwth?r King. Jr.<lb/>
Tu?doy ? Novombor 6<lb/>
4:00 PM.<lb/>
. Wft?tf viltfVfW tflfC<lb/>
Ttwirodoy ? Novmbf 8<lb/>
? ?00 PM.<lb/>
Mtro Arte: Jwbite ? rtendrix Th?el<lb/>
Frtdoy ? Novmbf 9<lb/>
740 a 0:00 PM.<lb/>
Mevte: TBchfd Pryor hi CaitcTt<lb/>
Sotwdoiy ? Novmbf 10<lb/>
7:00 0 9:00 PM.<lb/>
Movte: ftfdwrd Pryoc In Concert<lb/>
I Oy ttw ttodwrt IMom<lb/>
?:00 PM.<lb/>
MOTvry Afrl rPml! VVwCK oXOOV OMO<lb/>
Wihjhl Cultuiat Culu<lb/>
All Activities sponsored by Student Union<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0004"/><lb/>
The East Caroli<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
&amp; Opinions<lb/>
JL Tut<lb/>
Tuesday, November 6, 1979 Page 4<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Energy: life or death<lb/>
People are sick and tired of hearing<lb/>
about the energy crisis. They want<lb/>
some answers ? now. What have they<lb/>
gotten so far?<lb/>
Experts say that world oil production<lb/>
is up 5.8 percent for the first half of<lb/>
1979 compared to the same period in<lb/>
1978, but the industry was keeping<lb/>
production low to attempt to relieve<lb/>
downward pressure on oil prices. Oil<lb/>
companies continue to sell oil on the<lb/>
open market at prices greatly exceeding<lb/>
OPEC prices and to turn "old oil" into<lb/>
"new oil" for even greater profits. In<lb/>
other words, high prices are due to big<lb/>
oil gluttony rather than the real<lb/>
shortage.<lb/>
The oil giants are reporting record<lb/>
profits at the expense of the U.S.<lb/>
economy with no end in sight. They<lb/>
have even admitted to reducing the<lb/>
production of heating oil in favor of<lb/>
highly profitable jet fuel. Locally, the<lb/>
Greenville Energy Program is looking<lb/>
out for the elderly and disabled by<lb/>
providing free firewood and weather-<lb/>
ization services. Meanwhile, Congress<lb/>
is sitting back and watching as many<lb/>
poor people will freeze to death this<lb/>
winter. Cutting the bottom out of<lb/>
President Carter's windfall profits bag<lb/>
is insignificant compared to the inability<lb/>
of legislators to ensure warm homes for<lb/>
the less fortunate, who do not receive<lb/>
financial contributions from oil com-<lb/>
panies.<lb/>
If the impending death of shivering<lb/>
senior citizens fails to move cold-<lb/>
hearted congressmen to action, then the<lb/>
impending death of millions in the<lb/>
event of a major nuclear accident stands<lb/>
a snowball's-chance-in-helI of convincing<lb/>
legislators to do something about<lb/>
nuclear energy.<lb/>
The nuclear industry has been under<lb/>
fire by experts and concerned citizens<lb/>
for some time now and rightfully so. In<lb/>
the Three Mile Island incident last<lb/>
March, Metropolitan Edison and the<lb/>
Nuclear Regulatory Commission per-<lb/>
formed questionably in the nation's first<lb/>
potential nuclear disaster. The NRC<lb/>
faces total extinction if the president's<lb/>
special committee has its way.<lb/>
Nearly 10 percent of the population<lb/>
of the United States lives within 60<lb/>
miles of two nuclear reactors at Indian<lb/>
Point, near Buchanan, New York.<lb/>
That's 36 miles north of New York City.<lb/>
Chicago is only 25 miles south of two<lb/>
reactors. According to the Rasmussen<lb/>
Report to Congress, the worst nuclear<lb/>
accident at a power plant would result<lb/>
in only 3,300 deaths and 45,000 cases of<lb/>
radiation poisoning, but these estimates<lb/>
are widely disputed.<lb/>
The present problem with the<lb/>
disposal of spent fuel is acknowledged<lb/>
as the greatest risk in nuclear power,<lb/>
yet nuke plants continue to produce<lb/>
wastes with only one commercial<lb/>
disposal site open in the United States,<lb/>
Chem-Nuclear Systems, Inc. in Barn-<lb/>
well, South Carolina. Gov. Richard<lb/>
Riley recently announced that the dump<lb/>
is cutting in half the amount of waste it<lb/>
will accept. The national government is<lb/>
not only ignoring the needs for effective<lb/>
disposal at home, but they are<lb/>
providing such facilities for foreign<lb/>
countries at American taxpayers'<lb/>
expense. The United States unsuccess-<lb/>
fully attempted to purchase Palmyra, a<lb/>
privately-owned, 1,400-acre island lo-<lb/>
cated 1,100 miles southwest of Hawaii,<lb/>
to dispose of nuclear wastes from Asian<lb/>
atomic reactors.<lb/>
The president and Congress must<lb/>
take action to stop the manipulation of<lb/>
energy for private gains and to ensure<lb/>
the welfare of the American people.<lb/>
Without an effective windfall profits<lb/>
tax, legislation must be passed to halt<lb/>
profiteering on the open market and at<lb/>
home with tough and fully enforced<lb/>
regulations. If oil companies are forced<lb/>
to be responsible to our basic needs,<lb/>
nuclear power, a potential benefactor<lb/>
but even greater enemy, can develop<lb/>
safely and effectively at a slower rate,<lb/>
with little adverse affect on total<lb/>
available energy.<lb/>
These alternatives are not new.<lb/>
They are simply stifled by mammoth<lb/>
corporations and sluggish bureaucracy.<lb/>
But try to explain that to the person<lb/>
who will freeze to death this winter, or<lb/>
the parent whose child will die of<lb/>
leukemia.<lb/>
VJKewGKras<lb/>
mi 3c aneap<lb/>
MP Kb<lb/>
YJHfl?<lb/>
v<lb/>
Pop's People<lb/>
Quoth the Raven, 'Nevermore'<lb/>
For whom the bells toll<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer got mad.<lb/>
And when Chancellor Brewer gets<lb/>
mad, things get done.<lb/>
That's because he's the Boss.<lb/>
And that's what caused the<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
The campus administration, in its<lb/>
infinite wisdom and foresight, cut off all<lb/>
the bells on campus last week in an<lb/>
executive decision that took almost a<lb/>
year to finalize. In the end, 10<lb/>
administrative departments were in-<lb/>
volved in the decision making process.<lb/>
The decision itself was sent down<lb/>
from The Big House about seven<lb/>
months ago. The Chancellor decided<lb/>
that bells in the halls of an academic<lb/>
institution such as this made the place<lb/>
sound like a high school breaking for<lb/>
recess.<lb/>
The memo went something like this:<lb/>
"In times like these, with institutions<lb/>
vying for academic excellence, the<lb/>
'ministration feels that East Caro-<lb/>
l's image will be uplifted by the<lb/>
removal of the bell system, a time-<lb/>
honored convention which signals the<lb/>
change of classes<lb/>
Immediately the idea ran into<lb/>
trouble.<lb/>
One vice chancellor wanted to know<lb/>
how the professors were supposed to<lb/>
f<lb/>
know when to stop lecturing.<lb/>
Another vice chancellor said stu-<lb/>
dents would have a lot of trouble<lb/>
waking up at the end of classes without<lb/>
the bells.<lb/>
Another vice chancellor ordered a<lb/>
survey to be taken, and he remarked<lb/>
that he could probably get federal<lb/>
funding for the project.<lb/>
A university attorney said that the<lb/>
bell problem needed further study, and<lb/>
he knew of no law prohibiting it.<lb/>
A director of athletics said that<lb/>
without the bell a lot of the athletes<lb/>
would have problems knowing what<lb/>
time of day it was.<lb/>
A dean of medicine said he was<lb/>
worried about the change in metabolism<lb/>
certain freshmen would suffer if they<lb/>
had to do without the bells.<lb/>
Several administrative officials sup-<lb/>
ported the move.<lb/>
An assistant to the chancellor said<lb/>
he thought it was a great idea.<lb/>
Another assistant to the chancellor<lb/>
(who still likes the job, he likes the job,<lb/>
he likes) said he thought it was a<lb/>
prime example of Brewer's creative and<lb/>
provocative thinking in a time of great<lb/>
social upheaval.<lb/>
It's a good thing the chancellor<lb/>
doesn't mind bells on telephones.<lb/>
By LARRY POPELKA<lb/>
What's so spooky<lb/>
about Halloween?<lb/>
I never get scared.<lb/>
Everybody knows there's<lb/>
no such thing as ghosts,<lb/>
goblins, spooks, voodoos,<lb/>
vampires, zombies, wit-<lb/>
ches and the Incredible<lb/>
Melting Man. So why do<lb/>
we have a holiday to get<lb/>
scared about it all?<lb/>
I suppose 300 years<lb/>
ago when the puritans<lb/>
were still staking out old<lb/>
hags they thought were<lb/>
witches a person could get<lb/>
a little freaked out on<lb/>
Halloween. But today<lb/>
what's the point?<lb/>
I was complaining a-<lb/>
bout this very fact last<lb/>
week when someone told<lb/>
me about a Halloween<lb/>
seance they were having<lb/>
and invited me to come.<lb/>
I had never been to a<lb/>
seance, but anyone with a<lb/>
head between his shoul-<lb/>
ders will tell you seances<lb/>
are phony.<lb/>
They were invented in<lb/>
1848 by three women<lb/>
known as the Fox sisters<lb/>
who convinced everyone<lb/>
?including President Lin-<lb/>
coln's wife?that they<lb/>
could talk to dead people,<lb/>
who responded by making<lb/>
strange cracking sounds.<lb/>
After padding their<lb/>
pocketbooks for several<lb/>
years the Foxes confessed<lb/>
that the cracking sounds<lb/>
were nothing more than<lb/>
one of the sisters cracking<lb/>
her toe joints.<lb/>
Since then every seer<lb/>
in the country has been<lb/>
cracking toes and uttering<lb/>
strange words to try to<lb/>
make money off poor fools<lb/>
who believe in dead<lb/>
spirits.<lb/>
I wasn't too interested<lb/>
in watching some clown<lb/>
crack his joints, but seeing<lb/>
how I had nothing planned<lb/>
at midnight that night, I<lb/>
figured I might as well go<lb/>
for a good laugh.<lb/>
The seance was held in<lb/>
a round classroom at<lb/>
Kendall College, a small<lb/>
liberal arts college in<lb/>
Evanston, 111. About 20 of<lb/>
us sat in a semi-circular<lb/>
arc of chairs surrounding a<lb/>
wooden table with a<lb/>
candle, a chest and a red<lb/>
velvet backdrop.<lb/>
In a few moments our<lb/>
deck of cards, which had<lb/>
letters of the alphabet<lb/>
instead of numbers, and<lb/>
put them in a glass holder<lb/>
inside the doll house while<lb/>
chanting, "Spirits are you<lb/>
there? Spirits are you<lb/>
there? Spirits, ARE YOU<lb/>
THERE?"<lb/>
Finally the "Y" card<lb/>
jumped out of the deck.<lb/>
Then the "E And then<lb/>
the "S And then all the<lb/>
"1 can't imagine what Poe's spirit<lb/>
would be doing in Evanston, III.<lb/>
He was buried in Baltimore,<lb/>
which is hardly a hop, slip and<lb/>
a howl away<lb/>
spirit leader, Eugene Bur-<lb/>
ger, appeared in front of<lb/>
the table. Burger, a large,<lb/>
balding man with a long<lb/>
gray beard that scrunched<lb/>
awkwardly against his<lb/>
chest, looked like some<lb/>
sort of European warlock<lb/>
who belonged in a stone<lb/>
castle on a mountain top.<lb/>
He said he used to be<lb/>
a college professor before<lb/>
he entered the spirit world<lb/>
profession, but I can't<lb/>
imagine what kind of<lb/>
classes he taught. Maybe<lb/>
Intro to Toe Crackine<lb/>
A01. <lb/>
Burger started the<lb/>
seance by showing us a<lb/>
doll house he said was<lb/>
haunted. That sounded<lb/>
pretty dumb to me. Why<lb/>
would a spirit be in a doll<lb/>
house? Did Barbie kill Ken<lb/>
there?<lb/>
But Burger said he<lb/>
could prove it was<lb/>
haunted. He took out a<lb/>
deck of cards, which had<lb/>
letters of the alphabet<lb/>
instead of numbers, and<lb/>
put them in a glass holder<lb/>
But Burger said he<lb/>
could prove it was<lb/>
haunted. He took out a<lb/>
others flew up into the<lb/>
house.<lb/>
The spirits were there<lb/>
?or so said Burger. But I<lb/>
think he had magnets or<lb/>
something.<lb/>
Next he brought out a<lb/>
wooden hand, which he<lb/>
said was given to him by a<lb/>
friend named Sylvia, who<lb/>
is now dead, to help<lb/>
communicate with the<lb/>
spirit world.<lb/>
After someone from<lb/>
the audience cho?e a word<lb/>
and wrote it down<lb/>
secretly, Burger put Syl-<lb/>
via's hand on a board and<lb/>
had her spell out the word<lb/>
by tapping the wooden<lb/>
arm against the board.<lb/>
The arm looked like it<lb/>
was moving on its own.<lb/>
Somehow, it tapped out<lb/>
the right word, too, as<lb/>
Burger recited the alpha-<lb/>
bet.<lb/>
But I was skeptical.<lb/>
Burger let us examine this<lb/>
wooden hand, and on the<lb/>
surface it did look quite<lb/>
plain. But he must have<lb/>
had strings or magnets or<lb/>
something to make it tap.<lb/>
If Sylvia was dead, why<lb/>
the heck would she care<lb/>
about guessing a silly<lb/>
word?<lb/>
After saying goodbe<lb/>
to Sylvia, Burger took out<lb/>
two chalkboards, which he<lb/>
said would help him<lb/>
communicate even better<lb/>
with the spirits.<lb/>
I had heard of this trick<lb/>
before. The boards start<lb/>
out blank, and when<lb/>
everyone's not looking, the<lb/>
spirit leader switches<lb/>
boards with one that has a<lb/>
pre-written message on it<lb/>
and tnen says some spirit<lb/>
wrote it.<lb/>
I watched closely a<lb/>
Burger numbered each<lb/>
side of the boards, then<lb/>
asked a volunteer from the<lb/>
audience, named Kathy,<lb/>
who she wanted to com-<lb/>
municate with. Kathv aid<lb/>
Edgar Allen Poe.<lb/>
Burger held the boards<lb/>
in front of him while<lb/>
chanting some insane<lb/>
phrases, and in a few<lb/>
moments he produced four<lb/>
messages from Poe.<lb/>
The messages were<lb/>
something weird like "Be-<lb/>
ware of the evil in the<lb/>
darkness of the night<lb/>
but they were all ad-<lb/>
dressed to Kathy by name.<lb/>
And Burger hadn't even<lb/>
changed boards.<lb/>
I figured he had to<lb/>
have switches on the sides<lb/>
or something to flip the<lb/>
writing surfaces. But I was<lb/>
a little confused as to how<lb/>
Kathy's name got on<lb/>
there. Maybe it was set up<lb/>
with her in advance. I<lb/>
can't imagine what Poe's<lb/>
spirit would be doing in<lb/>
Evanston, 111. He was<lb/>
buried in Baltimore, which<lb/>
is hardly a hop, slip and a<lb/>
howl away.<lb/>
I stumbled out into the<lb/>
dark empty street, trying<lb/>
to figure out how Burger<lb/>
had done it. Was this a<lb/>
high-class fraud or were<lb/>
those really spirits in<lb/>
there?<lb/>
r<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
ASST. DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Terry Herndon<lb/>
ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
Cheryl Holder<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Steve O'Geary<lb/>
Karen Wendt<lb/>
Terry Gray<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
K.C. Needham<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
COPY EDITOR<lb/>
AD TECH. SUPER.<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree<lb/>
Diane Henderson<lb/>
Paul Lincke<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is the student<lb/>
newspaper of East Carolina University<lb/>
sponsored by the Media Board of ECU<lb/>
and Is distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic year<lb/>
weekly during the summer.<lb/>
Offices are located on the second floor of<lb/>
Old South<lb/>
address Is: Old<lb/>
NC<lb/>
tw<lb/>
Building. Our mailing<lb/>
South Building, ECU,<lb/>
27534.<lb/>
The phone numbers are: 757-6366, 6367,<lb/>
630f. Subscriptions are $10 annually,<lb/>
alumni $? annually.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0005"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
man i<lb/>
features<lb/>
Tuesday, November 6, 1979 Page 5<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Tin der box<lb/>
sponsors<lb/>
'Pipe Craze'<lb/>
By BILL JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
'This will definitely be<lb/>
a 'world qualifying' e-<lb/>
vent insists Walter Mc-<lb/>
Cauley, Manager of The<lb/>
Tinderbox Greenville's on-<lb/>
ly tobacco specialty shop.<lb/>
Mr. McCauley explain-<lb/>
ed further that the First<lb/>
Annual Tinderbox Pipe<lb/>
Smoking Contest, to be<lb/>
held this Saturday at the<lb/>
Carolina East Mall at 3:30<lb/>
p.m would be conducted<lb/>
"strictly by the rules<lb/>
The "rules" are those<lb/>
accorded by the British<lb/>
Pipe Smoking Counsel.<lb/>
The Counsel hosts an<lb/>
annual international con-<lb/>
test at St. Claude, France.<lb/>
St. Claude is the home of<lb/>
the "briar" pipe. The<lb/>
briar pipe's unexcelled<lb/>
porosity gives it the much<lb/>
looked for quality of<lb/>
drawing moisture from the<lb/>
tobacco to the outside of<lb/>
the pipe where it can<lb/>
evaporate. This makes for<lb/>
a much smoother drawing,<lb/>
evenly burning bowl of<lb/>
tobacco.<lb/>
Each contestant in the<lb/>
Pipe Smoking Contest will<lb/>
be given 3.3 grams<lb/>
(approximately one bowl<lb/>
full) of the same type of<lb/>
tobacco. The type to be<lb/>
used will not be made<lb/>
public until the time of the<lb/>
contest. It is the same<lb/>
type used in the world<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
Then, after one minute<lb/>
for the "char light" or<lb/>
initial lighting of the<lb/>
surface tobacco and the<lb/>
first "tamping" or recom-<lb/>
pression of the tobacco<lb/>
which expands when fired,<lb/>
timing will begin.<lb/>
The winner is the<lb/>
smoker who, using only<lb/>
the two matches can keep<lb/>
his pipe going longest.<lb/>
The current world record<lb/>
is two hours, 10 minutes<lb/>
and 40 seconds.<lb/>
Mr. McCauley en-<lb/>
courages women to parti-<lb/>
cipate in the contest,<lb/>
which is billed as the<lb/>
second largest event of the<lb/>
Greenville J.Cs Tobacco<lb/>
Days Festival.<lb/>
The 1975 World Pipe<lb/>
Smoking Championship<lb/>
was won by a woman.<lb/>
Mr. McCauley believes<lb/>
that society's views about<lb/>
women smoking pipes,<lb/>
what has been previously<lb/>
regarded as a "nasty,<lb/>
dirty habit is rapidly<lb/>
changing. He says about<lb/>
20 percent of his clientele<lb/>
are women. They prefer<lb/>
the more petite pipes,<lb/>
especially a sleek line<lb/>
which appear designed for<lb/>
women called Bent Bobs.<lb/>
Registration for Satur-<lb/>
day's contest bears out<lb/>
McCauley's statements.<lb/>
Two of the 15 participants<lb/>
which had signed up by<lb/>
last Friday were female.<lb/>
Prizes for the First<lb/>
Annual Tinderbox Pipe<lb/>
Smoking Contest are im-<lb/>
pressive. The first place<lb/>
winner will receive a<lb/>
carved $150 meershchaum<lb/>
"eagle claw" pipe, a<lb/>
ribbon and a plaque.<lb/>
Second place will receive a<lb/>
Caminetto pipe and rib-<lb/>
bon. Third place earns a<lb/>
Verona pipe and ribbon.<lb/>
There will also be a prize<lb/>
for first pipe out and gifts<lb/>
for all entries.<lb/>
Pipe smoking contests<lb/>
are not all without un-<lb/>
gentlemanly conduct.<lb/>
In last year's world<lb/>
competition, the Italian<lb/>
team was disqualified for<lb/>
using wooden tampers<lb/>
which, on contact with<lb/>
glowing tobacco, would<lb/>
ignite, enabling a dying<lb/>
bowl to be rekindled.<lb/>
In the Greenville com-<lb/>
petition, tampers will be<lb/>
provided to contestants by<lb/>
the Tinderbox.<lb/>
Edwards' comedy<lb/>
'10 'only scores '6'<lb/>
By JOHN WALDEN<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
The new comedy film,<lb/>
"10 has a talented cast<lb/>
and a fine comedy director<lb/>
in Blake Edwards (known<lb/>
for his "Pink Panther"<lb/>
films). Yet, one comes out<lb/>
of the movie thinking that<lb/>
"10" was more of a six<lb/>
than anything else because<lb/>
of a departure to serious-<lb/>
ness near the end.<lb/>
The main character in<lb/>
"10" is a man who has<lb/>
everything ? a successful<lb/>
career writing music, a<lb/>
luxurious home in the<lb/>
Hollywood Hills and even<lb/>
a beautiful live-in girl-<lb/>
friend to go along with it.<lb/>
Still, George Webber is<lb/>
not happy. He has just<lb/>
reached the age of 42, an<lb/>
age when many men start<lb/>
looking back more than<lb/>
forward. Like most men,<lb/>
George Webber wants to<lb/>
find the perfect woman.<lb/>
Before he plunges into<lb/>
middle-aged muckery, he<lb/>
wants to experience the<lb/>
love of the woman of his<lb/>
dreams.<lb/>
Although Webber is<lb/>
always disappointed, he<lb/>
continues to comb the<lb/>
town searching for his<lb/>
ideal woman. He finally<lb/>
meets his fantasy woman<lb/>
one day at a stop light on<lb/>
his way home.<lb/>
It is love at first sight.<lb/>
Unfortunately for him,<lb/>
she is going to her<lb/>
wedding. Undeterred,<lb/>
Webber goes after her,<lb/>
and the chase is on.<lb/>
George Webber (Dudley<lb/>
Moore) trails this un-<lb/>
reachable beauty (Bo Der-<lb/>
ek) everywhere. His mis-<lb/>
adventures while trying to<lb/>
find her make for good<lb/>
comedy. Meanwhile, his<lb/>
jilted girlfriend (Julie An-<lb/>
drews) waits patiently for<lb/>
him to come back to his<lb/>
senses.<lb/>
The comedy film "10"<lb/>
is the stuff that Blake<lb/>
Edwards is known for.<lb/>
"The Pink Panther" di-<lb/>
rector is a master of this<lb/>
type of comedy situation.<lb/>
Dudley Moore should<lb/>
also be given due credit.<lb/>
He makes a good showing<lb/>
as he did in "Foul Play<lb/>
in which he portrayed a<lb/>
swinging symphony con-<lb/>
ductor who kept rubber<lb/>
dolls in his room. This<lb/>
British comedian knows<lb/>
how to add a certain wit<lb/>
and charm to Webber that<lb/>
lets us understand him<lb/>
better. He will most likely<lb/>
be seen on the screen<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Both leading actresses<lb/>
deserve recognition as<lb/>
well. Julie Andrews's act-<lb/>
ing is always very good,<lb/>
and as for the lovely Bo<lb/>
Derek, she looks more like<lb/>
a "15" than a "10 Her<lb/>
acting is on par with the<lb/>
others too.<lb/>
What then went<lb/>
wrong? With a good cast<lb/>
like this one, Edwards<lb/>
should have been able to<lb/>
bring us a great comedy<lb/>
flick.<lb/>
The problem may be<lb/>
that Edwards is not<lb/>
sticking to what he knows<lb/>
best. Near the end of the<lb/>
movie, he tries too hard to<lb/>
bring a serious tone to this<lb/>
otherwise soft comedy.<lb/>
The values that he puts<lb/>
into the movie are not<lb/>
necessarily bad. Yet, they<lb/>
seem to subtract rather<lb/>
than add to this film. The<lb/>
audience would probably<lb/>
have wanted a little more<lb/>
comedy and a lot less<lb/>
seriousness.<lb/>
Another fault with the<lb/>
movie is its anti-climatic<lb/>
ending.<lb/>
Although "10" does<lb/>
not measure up to Ed-<lb/>
ward's earlier "Pink Pan-<lb/>
ther" movies, it is still a<lb/>
pretty good comedy and is<lb/>
well worth your money to<lb/>
go and see it.<lb/>
Students addicted to 'Soap Opera<lb/>
By K.C. NEEDHAM<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
"It's always fun to try<lb/>
and figure out who got the<lb/>
poor bitch pregnant The<lb/>
old adage that only house<lb/>
wives and the bedridden<lb/>
watch soap operas is no<lb/>
longer true. A quick check<lb/>
across the college cam-<lb/>
puses of America reveals<lb/>
that a large percentage of<lb/>
students spend quite a few<lb/>
daytime hours glued to the<lb/>
tube.<lb/>
ECU is no exception.<lb/>
"Sure I watch soap<lb/>
operas one student said.<lb/>
"I've been watching a<lb/>
couple of them in the<lb/>
summer since I was 13.<lb/>
Now I can watch year<lb/>
round<lb/>
For some, the viewing<lb/>
of daytime television is no<lb/>
more than a break in the<lb/>
round of classes. It's a<lb/>
chance to sit back, grab a<lb/>
smoke and a drink and put<lb/>
those tired feet up.<lb/>
For others, watching a<lb/>
certain soap opera at a<lb/>
certain time is a compul-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
"Every year I schedule<lb/>
my classes so they won't<lb/>
interfere with the soap<lb/>
operas I like. I know it's<lb/>
stupid said one ECU<lb/>
coed.<lb/>
"Hell another laugh-<lb/>
ed, "a couple of times I've<lb/>
gone through the pain of<lb/>
drop-add when I really<lb/>
didn't have to, just so I<lb/>
could get out in time for<lb/>
my soaps<lb/>
"Oh God another<lb/>
student said, "my room-<lb/>
mate and I fight all the<lb/>
time about which soap<lb/>
opera we'll watch because<lb/>
our two favorites come on<lb/>
at the same time on<lb/>
different channels. Last<lb/>
year, when everyone knew<lb/>
Liza was going to find out<lb/>
Travis wasn't really dead,<lb/>
a bunch of my friends cut<lb/>
class just so they could see<lb/>
the big moment. We all<lb/>
sat there and sighed. It<lb/>
was a really touching<lb/>
scene<lb/>
A new twist to the saga<lb/>
of soap opera watching is<lb/>
the surprising number of<lb/>
male students who tend to<lb/>
keep up with the girls as<lb/>
far as devotion to soaps is<lb/>
concerned.<lb/>
As one coed put it,<lb/>
"When I met my boy-<lb/>
friend last year, he really<lb/>
amazed me. He was the<lb/>
one telling me what was<lb/>
going on on all the soaps.<lb/>
I didn't think guys<lb/>
watched<lb/>
"Watch soap operas?"<lb/>
said a male student,<lb/>
"Sure, a bunch of the<lb/>
guys get together and<lb/>
laugh at them mostly.<lb/>
Sometimes it's interesting<lb/>
to find out what's doing<lb/>
though. You know ?<lb/>
who's been raped, who's<lb/>
been messing with who's<lb/>
wife. It's alwasy fun to try<lb/>
and figure who got the<lb/>
poor bitch pregnant<lb/>
"I watched one be-<lb/>
cause I saw a preview<lb/>
about a girl who was<lb/>
getting attacked by a<lb/>
shark. So, I watched. I cut<lb/>
class for a damn week,<lb/>
and it really pissed me off.<lb/>
He "didn't even touch her.<lb/>
I thought that shark was<lb/>
gonna tear her freakin'<lb/>
legs off, but she got<lb/>
rescued<lb/>
Even the fact that the<lb/>
plots of each soap opera<lb/>
vary little from one to the<lb/>
other doesn't seem to<lb/>
phase students.<lb/>
"You just kind of get<lb/>
involved in it, like you<lb/>
know those people or<lb/>
something a student<lb/>
states. "I mean, sure, the<lb/>
same stuff is happening on<lb/>
all the soaps, but it's<lb/>
different people. You<lb/>
really want to know if<lb/>
Lance is going to find out<lb/>
that Leslie's baby is really<lb/>
his<lb/>
"They drag things out<lb/>
so much another student<lb/>
sighed. "You almost know<lb/>
for sure what's going to<lb/>
happen, but you want to<lb/>
see it for yourself. By the<lb/>
time one thing finally<lb/>
happens you're hooked<lb/>
into wanting to find out<lb/>
what's going to happen to<lb/>
someone else on the<lb/>
show<lb/>
"It's all the same<lb/>
damn story, you know?<lb/>
Watch, you've seen them<lb/>
all, so 1 quit watching.<lb/>
Then one time I just<lb/>
happened to see one I<lb/>
used to watch, and<lb/>
Wham-Ban, here I am<lb/>
again<lb/>
Of course, there are<lb/>
always those who wouldn't<lb/>
be caught dead watching a<lb/>
soap opera. Many find<lb/>
them childish and boring.<lb/>
Yet the fact remains that a<lb/>
large portion of the ECU<lb/>
student body watches and<lb/>
enjoys daytime television.<lb/>
"It's like this said a<lb/>
resident of Belk dorm,<lb/>
"What the hell else do I<lb/>
have to do in the<lb/>
afternoons?"<lb/>
Fifth Annual Ball<lb/>
provides Halloween fun<lb/>
Ninety year old ghost haunts Opera<lb/>
By LEIGH COAKLEY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
wi<lb/>
11<lb/>
Twin Rinks<lb/>
NEVER be the same!<lb/>
If you happened to<lb/>
miss the Fifth Annual<lb/>
Halloween Masquerade<lb/>
Ball sponsored by the<lb/>
Roxy Music Arts and<lb/>
Crafts Center, Inc it was<lb/>
an evening to behold. It<lb/>
reminded me of a costume<lb/>
party held in my high<lb/>
school gym.<lb/>
There was a vast<lb/>
variety of costumes from<lb/>
Groucho Marx to God. It<lb/>
was useless to try to<lb/>
identify a familiar face,<lb/>
with the exception of those<lb/>
individuals who came as<lb/>
is. It was quite amusing to<lb/>
see Miss Piggy dancing<lb/>
with Darth Vadar, and<lb/>
there were tales of a<lb/>
headless horseman riding<lb/>
up on a white stallion.<lb/>
Local entertainment at<lb/>
the ball included Real<lb/>
Gone Cats, a '60s pro-<lb/>
gressive, original rock<lb/>
band; the Jerry Thomas<lb/>
Band, spicing up the party<lb/>
with a bit of rhythm and<lb/>
blues; some jaaxy rock<lb/>
from Buford T. Band and<lb/>
the heavy-metal thunder<lb/>
from Two Dollar Pistol.<lb/>
These energetic musicians<lb/>
held the crowd together<lb/>
until the wee hours of the<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
The costume contest<lb/>
was a disappointment for<lb/>
many.<lb/>
The judging was post-<lb/>
poned until the tail end of<lb/>
the ball, and by that time<lb/>
the judges had grown<lb/>
weary and gone home.<lb/>
Faculty members from the<lb/>
the ball included<lb/>
Real Gone Cats, a<lb/>
progressive,<lb/>
original rock band;<lb/>
the Jerry Thomas<lb/>
Band, spicing up<lb/>
the party with a bit<lb/>
of rhythm and<lb/>
bluesand some<lb/>
jazzy rock -<lb/>
dance and art departments<lb/>
were asked to judge the<lb/>
contest, but as we all<lb/>
know, 8:00 a.m. classes<lb/>
come mighty early.<lb/>
The sponsors of the<lb/>
ball and band members<lb/>
appeared to be irritated<lb/>
about the entire costume<lb/>
contest. Their agitation<lb/>
showed and left costumers<lb/>
feeling silly to have gone<lb/>
to all the trouble of<lb/>
dressing for the occasion.<lb/>
Another dampening<lb/>
factor of the ball was that<lb/>
to even be eligible to be<lb/>
"judged" in the costume<lb/>
contest, entrants had to<lb/>
pay $1 in addition to the<lb/>
14 price of attending the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
To make a long story<lb/>
short, the judging was<lb/>
based on audience ap-<lb/>
plause. The finalists of the<lb/>
contest were the Statue of<lb/>
Liberty and "Qualude<lb/>
After a long evening of<lb/>
partaking of the "spirits<lb/>
need I say which finalist<lb/>
won?<lb/>
Personally, I was dis-<lb/>
appointed with the out-<lb/>
come of the contest. It was<lb/>
obvious that many had<lb/>
spent a great deal of time<lb/>
and creativity for this<lb/>
special occasion and more<lb/>
rightly deserved the $100<lb/>
prize.<lb/>
The Fifth Annual Hal-<lb/>
loween Masquerade Ball<lb/>
was a good time for most.<lb/>
I sincerely hope that the<lb/>
profits from this event will<lb/>
help the Roxy to pay off<lb/>
old debts and apply the<lb/>
earnings to the acquisition<lb/>
of a new building so they<lb/>
can help bring some<lb/>
"culture" back to Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
WOODSTOCK, ILL.<lb/>
(AP)-Elvira, Elvira. Oh,<lb/>
wherefore art thou, Elvira?<lb/>
Since the turn of the<lb/>
century, Elvira has been<lb/>
the beloved resident ghost<lb/>
of the 90-year-old Wood-<lb/>
stock Opera House.<lb/>
Although she is a ghost<lb/>
of all seasons, she seems<lb/>
to get most restless when<lb/>
Halloween approaches.<lb/>
Doors click shut,<lb/>
moans come from above<lb/>
the stage, radiators pound,<lb/>
clank and chatter.<lb/>
"I don't think I believe<lb/>
in Elvira, but I go along<lb/>
with it said John<lb/>
Scharress, technical direc-<lb/>
tor. "There are explan-<lb/>
ations for everything. A<lb/>
door near the stairs, if left<lb/>
ajar, will click shut when<lb/>
on the grid above the<lb/>
stage sometimes give off<lb/>
spooky, moaning sounds.<lb/>
Most old radiators clank<lb/>
when they are warming<lb/>
up<lb/>
Elvira is a welcomed<lb/>
ghost who lives in the<lb/>
Opera House, not haunts<lb/>
it. Some school children in<lb/>
this community northwest<lb/>
of Chicago have heard<lb/>
more about her than about<lb/>
Orson Wells, Paul New-<lb/>
man, Geraldine Page,<lb/>
Shelley Berman, Tom<lb/>
Bosley, Betsy Palmer and<lb/>
Lois Nettleton?all one-<lb/>
time summer-season<lb/>
Woodstock Players.<lb/>
Elvira, so the story<lb/>
goes, was a beautiful<lb/>
actress who hanged her-<lb/>
self in the Opera House<lb/>
belfry when her actor lover<lb/>
spurned her.<lb/>
Most of those who<lb/>
have performed on the<lb/>
stage believe they have<lb/>
seen Elvira during rehear-<lb/>
sals, sitting in her re-<lb/>
served seat, DD113, on<lb/>
the aisle in the balcony.<lb/>
During regular per-<lb/>
formances, that seat<lb/>
usually is the first of the<lb/>
440 to be sold said Doug<lb/>
Rankin, 30, director of the<lb/>
Opera House.<lb/>
"About 12,000 people<lb/>
tour the Opera House<lb/>
during the season and 50<lb/>
percent of them want to sit<lb/>
down on seat DD113, and<lb/>
nine out of 10 of them will<lb/>
ask about Elvira<lb/>
Rankin said he never<lb/>
has seen Elvira in the four<lb/>
years he has been dir-<lb/>
ector. "I just don't think<lb/>
she comes around the<lb/>
administrative offices he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Esther Wanieck, who is<lb/>
active in Woodstock opera<lb/>
affairs, insists she has<lb/>
seen Elvira a half dozen<lb/>
times.<lb/>
"She wears a diaphan-<lb/>
ous, full-length, pink<lb/>
gown said Mrs. Wan-<lb/>
ieck. "Her flaxen hair<lb/>
flows over her shoulders.<lb/>
She is tall and slender.<lb/>
Those who have not seen<lb/>
her have felt her spirit.<lb/>
She never talks, but her<lb/>
sighs can be heard of<lb/>
approval, disapproval,<lb/>
boredom, frustration or<lb/>
happiness.<lb/>
??<lb/>
o?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
l? TRAVEL FILM<lb/>
f<lb/>
.<lb/>
A Travel-Adventure film,<lb/>
Escape to the South Seas,<lb/>
will show on Nov. 15, at<lb/>
8:00 p.m. in Hendrix<lb/>
Theater.<lb/>
JUBILEE!<lb/>
The Theater Arts Com-<lb/>
mittee presents Jubilee a<lb/>
celebration in song with<lb/>
tunes from Porgy and<lb/>
Bess, Showboat, the Wiz<lb/>
and more. Jubilee! will be<lb/>
held in Hendrix Auditor-<lb/>
ium at 8:00 p.m. on<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 8.<lb/>
?rAMW6 Atoor CouxU- t?c I)io w?f<lb/>
ti QfNio Atoms<lb/>
nooMMrrr rua)k?p our-<lb/>
AofMTl' kicttp rti our<lb/>
Amo I 6?ClYl?fT)r<lb/>
ifcip A oo rtqec, so<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 6 November 1979<lb/>
Weekly Album Review<lb/>
By Pat Minges<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
Tom Petty and The Heart-<lb/>
breakers ? Damn The<lb/>
Torpedoes ?<lb/>
The first thing I ever<lb/>
heard by Tom Petty was<lb/>
the release of his pretty<lb/>
hot single "Breakdown"<lb/>
several years ago. About<lb/>
this time, an FM station in<lb/>
Charlotte was offering a<lb/>
free trip to Atlanta to see<lb/>
I he Heartbreakers sold<lb/>
out performance at the<lb/>
Fox Theatre. "Who is this<lb/>
guj and how did he sell<lb/>
"lit the Fox? I pondered.<lb/>
To borrow a quote, "I<lb/>
have seen the future of<lb/>
rock 'n' roll, and it is Tom<lb/>
etty.<lb/>
While there is a lot of<lb/>
experimentation in rock<lb/>
(i.e. new wave, power<lb/>
pop, mod revival), there<lb/>
are only a few artists<lb/>
caressing in main strea<lb/>
rock 'n' roll. Tom Petty is<lb/>
one of them.<lb/>
Petty is in the same<lb/>
realm as Bruce Spring-<lb/>
steen and Graham Parker,<lb/>
having a strong, urban (if<lb/>
not urbane) orientation in<lb/>
his music. On the back of<lb/>
the album, Petty is<lb/>
pictured on stage with a<lb/>
bottle of Jack Black at his<lb/>
side  now this is a man<lb/>
after my own heart.<lb/>
His voice is a cross<lb/>
between Roger McGuinn<lb/>
and Bob Dylan, but Petty<lb/>
is a rocker in the strictest<lb/>
definition of the word. The<lb/>
guitars are superb, the<lb/>
keyboards are equally<lb/>
good, and the songs are<lb/>
driven by an excellent<lb/>
rhythm section.<lb/>
Damn The Torpedoes<lb/>
takes over where Spring-<lb/>
steen left off with Born To<lb/>
Run and is in the fine<lb/>
tradition of strong Ameri-<lb/>
can rockers.<lb/>
If you like forceful rock<lb/>
with a good melodic basis,<lb/>
you've got to like Tom<lb/>
Petty. Damn the torpedoes<lb/>
and full speed ahead.<lb/>
Bob Marley And The<lb/>
Wailers ? Survival ?<lb/>
With this album, Bob<lb/>
Marley re-establishes him-<lb/>
self as the most potent<lb/>
force in reggae and one of<lb/>
the most prophetic lyricists<lb/>
in modern music.<lb/>
Reggae is the undis<lb/>
puted voice for the third<lb/>
world. It speaks out<lb/>
against the injustices of a<lb/>
place where a small<lb/>
majority (Babylon) lives a<lb/>
luxurious life of wasteful<lb/>
decadence, while around<lb/>
the corner individuals<lb/>
starve from lack of the<lb/>
basic necessities.<lb/>
It is this dichotomy<lb/>
which serves as the focal<lb/>
point of Marley's lyrics,<lb/>
and Survival is perhaps<lb/>
Marley's finest lyrical<lb/>
endeavor. Moreover, this<lb/>
album is his finest album<lb/>
musically since Natty<lb/>
Dread in 1975.<lb/>
It possesses the out-<lb/>
standing production that<lb/>
has been missing since<lb/>
that album.<lb/>
Survival shows a<lb/>
stronger jazz influence<lb/>
than has been in evidence<lb/>
See ALBUMS, page 7<lb/>
Electrolysis<lb/>
Permanent Removal<lb/>
of Unwanted Hair<lb/>
Free Consultation<lb/>
Mrs. Vicki Smith,<lb/>
Licensed Electrologist<lb/>
103 Oakmont Dr. Greenville<lb/>
756-3780<lb/>
Tues. Wed. Fri. 10:00-5:00<lb/>
Thurs. 2:00-7:00<lb/>
Discount to college Students<lb/>
!????????? CLIP COUPON<lb/>
Buy a bowl of Chili at regular price,<lb/>
get another<lb/>
for <lb/>
) OLD rASHIONCD<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
Offer good any day of the week<lb/>
after 4PM<lb/>
Expires: November 30. 1979<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
Good at all participating<lb/>
Wendy's<lb/>
CLIP COUPON<lb/>
F<lb/>
THE DRIFTERS<lb/>
MAURICE 'WILLIAMS<lb/>
&amp; THE ZODIACS<lb/>
BILLY SCOTT<lb/>
&amp; "THE "PROPHETS<lb/>
BENEFIT CONCERT<lb/>
cFor The<lb/>
Showmen<lb/>
"Tuesday- November 6th 9-00 TM<lb/>
at the<lb/>
CELBO WOOM<lb/>
PLUS Special drawing Tor A Weekend ?At<lb/>
beachcomber' Motel Atlantic eact)<lb/>
c?lll Proceeds Go To The SHOWMEN<lb/>
To Recoup Accident Losses<lb/>
Tickets Available At The Door' $3.00<lb/>
Country Fresh<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
Vi gal all flavors<lb/>
79<lb/>
Shepp's Spread<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
3$1.00 lib. v4,s<lb/>
J. F. G.<lb/>
quart Jar<lb/>
Mayonnaise 89<lb/>
Llmss;fea<lb/>
announces<lb/>
ECU NIGHT<lb/>
every Wed. 6:30-10:00<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
All students admitted for $1.00<lb/>
(includes skate rental) when<lb/>
presenting ECU I.D.<lb/>
104 Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
Behind Shoney's<lb/>
756-6000<lb/>
CLIFF'S -<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
AIX YOU<lb/>
sa.7s CAN EAT!<lb/>
MONDAY-THURSDAY<lb/>
TROUT, FLOUNDER,<lb/>
CRAB CAKES<lb/>
TEA is included with meal<lb/>
CLIFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CAKE SPECIAL<lb/>
2 Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw, and<lb/>
Hushpuppies. QQ<lb/>
California<lb/>
Red Grapes<lb/>
49lb<lb/>
Large<lb/>
Honeydew<lb/>
Melons<lb/>
$1.29 each<lb/>
2 Litre<lb/>
Shasta Drinks<lb/>
59<lb/>
All Flavors Reg &amp; Diet<lb/>
Simthfield<lb/>
Sliced Bacon<lb/>
T - Bone<lb/>
Steaks<lb/>
$2.29<lb/>
12oz pkg<lb/>
89<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
WELCH'S 20 oz.<lb/>
9rape jelly or jam<lb/>
2$1.00<lb/>
Sirloin Steaks<lb/>
$2.19<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
J. F. G.<lb/>
Peanut<lb/>
Butter<lb/>
3lb Jar<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0007"/><lb/>
6 November 1979 THE EAST CARm im.a<lb/>
in earlier endeavors, and<lb/>
Marley's shouting style<lb/>
that brought him acclaim<lb/>
ha? been eclipsed by a<lb/>
more flowing vocal beauty.<lb/>
Bob Marley has the<lb/>
ability to make his listen-<lb/>
ers shout with joy in a<lb/>
celebration of life and yet<lb/>
weep in sorrow for our<lb/>
brothers who starve. It is<lb/>
time to take a long look at<lb/>
Bob Marley and an even<lb/>
ger one at ourselves.<lb/>
To quote Marley, "There<lb/>
- so much trouble in the<lb/>
world now All you got to<lb/>
is give a little<lb/>
Way Ion Jennings ? What<lb/>
s iround. Comes A-<lb/>
und ?<lb/>
This job has idiosyn-<lb/>
rases, but it offers sheer<lb/>
, leasures also. Normally, I<lb/>
would never buy this<lb/>
in and in all probabil-<lb/>
 never get a chance to<lb/>
on hear it.<lb/>
'w hat I would have<lb/>
oil out on!<lb/>
Admittedly, I never<lb/>
had much of preference<lb/>
Waylon and Willie or<lb/>
even much of a liking for<lb/>
the cowboy lifestyle.<lb/>
This album has taught<lb/>
ne a whole new respect.<lb/>
H hat Goes Around<lb/>
Comes Around is an ex-<lb/>
ellent release, from the<lb/>
ountry rockers on side<lb/>
one to the subtle, strong<lb/>
ballads on the second half.<lb/>
Jennings's voice can be a<lb/>
hearty boom or a deep<lb/>
mellow instrument. The<lb/>
dee personal statements<lb/>
presented are indeed the<lb/>
most impressive facet.<lb/>
Prejudice is based in<lb/>
ignorance, and from my<lb/>
own lack of enlightenment,<lb/>
I had preconceived ideas<lb/>
about what this type of<lb/>
music was like.<lb/>
Sometimes it is good to<lb/>
be proven wrong.<lb/>
It teaches a healthy<lb/>
respect for the complexi-<lb/>
ties of existence and the<lb/>
good in each of us.<lb/>
I heartily recommend<lb/>
this album for anyone,<lb/>
because if you are into<lb/>
outlaw-country, you don't<lb/>
need me to tell you about<lb/>
 avion Jennings, except<lb/>
that he has got a new<lb/>
um.<lb/>
April Wine ? Harder<lb/>
Faster ?<lb/>
This group is a living<lb/>
example of what Clone<lb/>
rock is. These guys are<lb/>
Boston clones, if they are<lb/>
anything at all.<lb/>
April Wine has a lot of<lb/>
the flavor of Boston, but<lb/>
the group lacks that one<lb/>
essential factor ? origin-<lb/>
ality.<lb/>
A line from Pat Bena-<lb/>
L?th?r Baits<lb/>
$6 to $19<lb/>
Leather Handbags<lb/>
$10 to $25<lb/>
Shoes Repaired To Look<lb/>
Like Now<lb/>
Riggan Shoo Repair<lb/>
&amp; Leather Shop<lb/>
111 WEST 4TH ST.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN QREENVILLE<lb/>
750-0204<lb/>
Parking in Front<lb/>
and Rear.<lb/>
SfifitfijMtfS<lb/>
Feast<lb/>
LOTSA GOLDEN FRIED<lb/>
SHRIMP ? FRENCH<lb/>
FRIES ? HUSH PUPPIES<lb/>
? COLESLAW<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
432 Greenville BK&amp;<lb/>
Album Reviews<lb/>
continued from page 6<lb/>
tar sums up this release,<lb/>
"My clone sleeps alone<lb/>
You can take whatever<lb/>
insinuations you wish from<lb/>
that statement and take<lb/>
this album, or leave it.<lb/>
Lonnie Liston Smith ? A<lb/>
Song For The Children ?<lb/>
Go out and buy this<lb/>
album.<lb/>
Before you accuse me<lb/>
of payola, let me explain<lb/>
that this album is related<lb/>
to a cause close to my<lb/>
heart. This is the Inter-<lb/>
national Year of the Child,<lb/>
and this album is dedicat-<lb/>
ed "to the future of the<lb/>
universe, the children of<lb/>
tomorrow. May they guide<lb/>
the planet with love,<lb/>
wisdom and understanding<lb/>
for the sake of all<lb/>
mankind (Lonnie Liston<lb/>
Smith) The proceeds of<lb/>
this album, if I am not<lb/>
mistaken, go to the Inter-<lb/>
national Save The Children<lb/>
Foundation.<lb/>
A few of the songs are<lb/>
disco, but that shows what<lb/>
a smart man Smith is,<lb/>
utilizing a trend to assist a<lb/>
good cause. Make no<lb/>
mistake, this is a very<lb/>
good jazz album. Smith is<lb/>
an excellent keyboard<lb/>
artist, and he has secured<lb/>
a good band to assist him.<lb/>
Gotta love this album.<lb/>
Chick Corea, Herbie Han-<lb/>
cock ? CoreaHancock ?<lb/>
This album features<lb/>
two of the most respected<lb/>
pianists in jazz music.<lb/>
It was recorded live in<lb/>
a duet performance on a<lb/>
couple of Steinway pianos.<lb/>
This is the second<lb/>
double album released<lb/>
from the 1978 concert tour<lb/>
by this dynamic duo, and<lb/>
its sister album was<lb/>
released on Hancock's<lb/>
label, Columbia. Most of<lb/>
the songs were written by<lb/>
Corea.<lb/>
"Maiden Voyage" and<lb/>
"Ostinata" are taken from<lb/>
Mikrokosmos for Two Pi-<lb/>
anos, Four Hands.<lb/>
Although this album<lb/>
would be great for jazz<lb/>
buffs, it is not for the<lb/>
general public.<lb/>
George Duke ? Master of<lb/>
The Game ?<lb/>
He may be the master,<lb/>
but what kind of game is<lb/>
he playing?<lb/>
This album is too funky<lb/>
to appeal to his former<lb/>
fusion audience, but not<lb/>
quite funky enough to<lb/>
appeal to most blacks. In<lb/>
fact, Duke is one of<lb/>
George Clinton's accursed<lb/>
funk clones.<lb/>
There is no doubt as to<lb/>
George Duke's virtuosity<lb/>
on his chosen instrument,<lb/>
keyboards, but as interest<lb/>
in his career among<lb/>
listeners declines, Duke<lb/>
continues to flee into his<lb/>
funky disco fantasy. So,<lb/>
his game seems to be<lb/>
some type of musical<lb/>
master-baiting.<lb/>
Who wants to play?<lb/>
Roy Gallagher ? Top<lb/>
Priority ?<lb/>
This Irish lad is one of<lb/>
.the most durable and<lb/>
professional guitarists to-<lb/>
day. He has been record-<lb/>
ing for nigh on ten years<lb/>
and has been able to<lb/>
withstand a plethora of<lb/>
changes that have occur-<lb/>
red in the music industry.<lb/>
Gallagher is still recording<lb/>
the same type of frenetic,<lb/>
lightening-fingered rock<lb/>
blasters he did on his first<lb/>
album.<lb/>
He has always been<lb/>
known as the "people's<lb/>
guitarist" and has been<lb/>
credited as being one of<lb/>
the most accomplished<lb/>
guitarists in rock.<lb/>
Top Priority is an<lb/>
electric album that will<lb/>
surely please any guitar<lb/>
enthusiast. Gallagher's<lb/>
three-piece band is a very<lb/>
powerful trio, and the<lb/>
album features many over-<lb/>
dubs and multitracks on<lb/>
guitar, producing a much<lb/>
more dynamic sound.<lb/>
If this album is suc-<lb/>
cessful, maybe he can<lb/>
afford a new shirt.<lb/>
Columbia jazz artists ?<lb/>
Individuals ?<lb/>
Maybe I am mellowing<lb/>
out due to old age or<lb/>
perhaps, as some have<lb/>
suggested, I have become<lb/>
a tool of the recording<lb/>
industry, but I have come<lb/>
to grips with my hatred of<lb/>
Columbia jazz. I now<lb/>
understand that they have<lb/>
a place in jazz. Columbia<lb/>
is bringing jazz music (?)<lb/>
to the people by present-<lb/>
ing it in a popular format.<lb/>
It is my hope that<lb/>
people not acquainted with<lb/>
jazz will develop a taste<lb/>
for it and move on to more<lb/>
progressive forms than can<lb/>
be found on Columbia.<lb/>
This album is some-<lb/>
what of a promotional<lb/>
album for Columbia jazz.<lb/>
It features a single select-<lb/>
ed cut from most of the<lb/>
artists recording with Co-<lb/>
lumbia, pieced together<lb/>
into a double album, and<lb/>
sold for the list price of a<lb/>
single album.<lb/>
(Albums courtesy of Re-<lb/>
cord Bar, Carolina East<lb/>
Mall and Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
Thanks to David Miller for<lb/>
his being a nice guy.)<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C. No. 31 Nightclub<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
FULL CIRCLE<lb/>
10 Beverage<lb/>
while it lasts<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Bill Deal &amp; The<lb/>
Rhondels<lb/>
(IFC Special)<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
BRECKENRIDGE<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
SIDEWINDER,<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
STREET TALK<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re-<lb/>
quired to be readily available for sale at or<lb/>
below the advertised price in each A&amp;P<lb/>
Store except as specificity noted in this<lb/>
ad.<lb/>
PRICES GOOD THRU SAT NOV. 10, AT ASP IN<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
AMERICA'S FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
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MonFri. 11:30-2:00<lb/>
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Evening buffet 0S.89<lb/>
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ASP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN<lb/>
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3$1<lb/>
novemBeR 8,1979 ? 8,00 p.m.<lb/>
henfccix theatpe ? east CaboIiiu Univeasity<lb/>
. aovance tickets .<lb/>
JBf ?CU Students. $1.00, faculty anO Staff, $3.00, Jff<lb/>
MKfMf PUBLIC. $4.00, QROUPS Of 20 OR mOQ6, $3.00 MfMM<lb/>
41 4l All tickets at the &amp;oor. $4.00. li H<lb/>
USTCAMUM<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
tickets avAiUBle At ecu centeal ticket of pee 757-6611. ext. 366 ??"<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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A Theatre Arte Presentation j<lb/>
CALIFORNIA SWEET EMPEROR<lb/>
RED GRAPES<lb/>
49C<lb/>
JUICY FLORIDA<lb/>
TANGERINES<lb/>
OR ? ORANGES<lb/>
? TANQELOS<lb/>
YOUR EACH<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
8?<lb/>
<lb/>
ATTENTION: Music Appreciation Students receive double credit for attending.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0008"/><lb/>
'he East Carolinian<lb/>
iian ? m<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Tuesday, November 6, 1979 Page 8<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Pirates run past Appalachian St 38-21<lb/>
(Photo by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
Anthony Collins struggles for yardage<lb/>
In Boone Saturday<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
BOONE ? Halfback Anthony Collins scored three<lb/>
touchdowns and rushed for 122 yards to lead East<lb/>
Carolina to a hard-fought 38-21 victory over Appalachian<lb/>
State Saturday.<lb/>
The game, billed as an "offensive show" by ECU<lb/>
coach Pat Dye, certainly lived up to its heading as the<lb/>
Pirates, now 4-3-1, accumulated 544 yards total<lb/>
offense-450 rushing- and the Mountaineers 470 yards.<lb/>
Collins' touchdowns came on runs of seven, one and<lb/>
three yards. The Penn Yann, N.Y. native, who went<lb/>
over the 800-yard mark for the season with his<lb/>
performance, was not the only Pirate back who sparkled,<lb/>
though. Fullback Theodore Sutton rushed for a team<lb/>
season-high of 134 yards and added one TD.<lb/>
"Usually you have to key on one back said<lb/>
Appalachian coach Jim Brakefield, "but today this<lb/>
wasn't the case<lb/>
Aside from Collins and Sutton, tow other Pirate<lb/>
backs rushed for over 50 yards apiece, halfback Sam<lb/>
Harrell rambling for 83 and quarterback Leander Green<lb/>
running for 52 more.<lb/>
For the Mountaineers, now 2-7, it was the passing<lb/>
attack which was their most effective weapon.<lb/>
Quarterback Steve Brown completed 16 or 27 passes for<lb/>
277 yards. Split end Rick Beasley, the nation's leading<lb/>
receiver coming into the game, caught six of those<lb/>
passes for 159 yards and two touchdowns.<lb/>
ECU coach Pat Dye said after the game that he was<lb/>
"in awe" of what the pass combination of<lb/>
Brown-to-Beasley could do. "It's almost like they have<lb/>
ESP, and combine that with ability and they're awfully<lb/>
tough to stop said Dye.<lb/>
The Pirates got on the scoreboard early, going 62<lb/>
yards in eight plays on their first possession for the<lb/>
game's first TD. A 25-yard Sam Harrell run set up a<lb/>
later seven-yard jaunt by Collins, who scored with just<lb/>
under five minutes gone in the first period.<lb/>
The Apps got on the board when, with 2:21 left in<lb/>
the first half, Brown hit Beasley with a 57-yard<lb/>
touchdown pass. Mark French's extra-point tied the<lb/>
6Big Four' sparkles<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
BOONE ? The Big Four. Most people think of North<lb/>
Carolina, Duke, North Carolina State and Wake Forest<lb/>
when the term is mentioned. But last Saturday afternoon<lb/>
the term applied more fittingly to four individuals-<lb/>
Collins, Sutton, Brown and Beasley.<lb/>
While the four universities that are considered "The<lb/>
Big Four" were all losing their games Saturday, the four<lb/>
individuals were exciting a weather-chilled crowd in<lb/>
Appalachian State's Conrad Stadium in a game featuring<lb/>
the host Mountaineers and East Carolina.<lb/>
The game, a 38-21 Pirate victory, turned out to be a<lb/>
ground show for ECU and an aerial display for the<lb/>
Apps. Led by halfback Anthony Collins and Fullback<lb/>
Theodore Sutton, the Pirates accumulated 544 yards<lb/>
total offense, 450 of them on the ground. Meanwhile,<lb/>
the Apps totaled 470 yards, 285 through the airways.<lb/>
Collins went over the 800-yard mark for the season<lb/>
with his 122-yard performance. The Penn Yan, N.Y.<lb/>
native also scored three touchdowns on runs of seven,<lb/>
one and three yards. He did little to hurt his pre-game<lb/>
yards per carry of 8.1, tops in the nation, as he gained<lb/>
his yardage on only 19 carries.<lb/>
"This is like a dream-come-true for me said<lb/>
Collins when told that he had three games to gain 200<lb/>
yards and go over the 1,000-yard mark for the season.<lb/>
"It's really hard for me to believe<lb/>
It wasn't very hard for the 13,000-plus fans packed in<lb/>
Conrad Stadium Saturday, though. Many "oohs" and'<lb/>
"aahs" were expelled from the crowd as Collins<lb/>
exploded for one exciting run after another.<lb/>
Also thrilling the crowd was ECU's burly fullback<lb/>
Sutton. Somewhat unimpressive in the first half, Sutton<lb/>
exploded for 97 yards in the second half alone on the<lb/>
way to a 134-yard performance. Twenty-eight of those<lb/>
yars came on the Pirates initial touchdown of the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
Sutton constantly bulled his way through the<lb/>
Mountaineer defense in the final half, often carrying two<lb/>
or more defenders on his back in an effort to gain more<lb/>
yardage. "Our game plan in the second half was to run<lb/>
straight at them, and run hard said Sutton. "So that's<lb/>
exactly what I tried to do<lb/>
Sutton's 134 yards was the most by a Pirate back this<lb/>
season and his second-best total ever, second only to his<lb/>
performance in last year's Independence Bowl.<lb/>
The second half of "The Big Four" belongs to the<lb/>
Mountaineers in the persons of quarterback Steve Brown<lb/>
and split end Rick Beasley. Brown completed 16 of 27<lb/>
passes for 277 yards and two touchdowns in the App<lb/>
loss.<lb/>
Six of Brown's passes went to Beasley, the nation's<lb/>
leading receiver coming into the game, for 159 yards.<lb/>
Two of Beasley's receptions went for touchdowns of 57<lb/>
and 38 yards.<lb/>
"I can't come up with the words to describe Brown<lb/>
and Beasley said ECU coach Pat Dye after the game.<lb/>
"It's almost like they have ESP, and combine that with<lb/>
ability and it's tough to stop<lb/>
On the two touchdown passes, Beasley was forced to<lb/>
ad-lib when he found his initial routes blocked by Pirate<lb/>
defenders. "They're a great combination said ECU<lb/>
safety Ruffin McNeill. "We lost containment on Beasley<lb/>
a couple of times and he always seemed to be in the<lb/>
right place at the right time<lb/>
The same can be said for the fans who were in<lb/>
Conrad Stadium Saturday afternoon. For they got to see<lb/>
"The Big Four" in action, all in one day and on one<lb/>
football field.<lb/>
ECU field hockey team<lb/>
finishes second in state<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
After a season marked<lb/>
by disappointment after<lb/>
disappointment, the Lady<lb/>
Pirate field hockey squad<lb/>
salvaged what had the<lb/>
potential to be a disastrous<lb/>
1979 campaign.<lb/>
Under the direction of<lb/>
assistant coach Anne<lb/>
Holmes, the Lady Bucs<lb/>
traveled to Rock Hill, S.C<lb/>
for the NCAIAW Division<lb/>
II tournament beginning<lb/>
on Thursday and surprised<lb/>
even themselves by cop-<lb/>
ping second place honors,<lb/>
losing only to Pfeiffer<lb/>
College 3-0 in the finals.<lb/>
ECU opened the tour-<lb/>
ney with a 1-0 win over<lb/>
Wake Forest University,<lb/>
who was seeded sixth<lb/>
prior to the match. Senior<lb/>
Kathy Zwigard netted the<lb/>
?<lb/>
necessary goal midway<lb/>
through the first half.<lb/>
"We were seeded<lb/>
fourth in the tournament<lb/>
said Holmes, "so we kind<lb/>
of expected to beat<lb/>
Wake<lb/>
The next Pirate victim<lb/>
was High Point College,<lb/>
whom ECU lost to 3-2 in<lb/>
regular season play. This<lb/>
time, however, it was the<lb/>
Lady Pirates who were<lb/>
victorious, 1-0.<lb/>
Again Zwigard pro-<lb/>
duced the only offense in<lb/>
the contest.<lb/>
ECU head coach Laurie<lb/>
Arrants joined the team<lb/>
before the final matchup<lb/>
with Pfeiffer on Friday<lb/>
after attending a seminar<lb/>
in Atlanta.<lb/>
"I flew in Friday<lb/>
morning and everyone I<lb/>
saw was telling me how<lb/>
well East Carolina was<lb/>
playing said Arrants. "I<lb/>
thought 'my goodness; is<lb/>
this the same team I<lb/>
watched all season?'<lb/>
"They were doing<lb/>
things that we had talked<lb/>
about all year, but they<lb/>
had never done in a game<lb/>
situation. They were inter-<lb/>
changing and passing<lb/>
beautifully.<lb/>
"Against Pfeiffer, they<lb/>
just mentally weren't able<lb/>
to pull themselves to-<lb/>
gether. They had played<lb/>
two games the day before<lb/>
and they were already<lb/>
tired. I think maybe the<lb/>
realized they were playing<lb/>
for the state championship<lb/>
and it frightened them.<lb/>
"You can't be too<lb/>
upset when a team that<lb/>
has only won two games in<lb/>
regular season play comes<lb/>
on and gets second place<lb/>
in the state. They really<lb/>
played great hockey<lb/>
The end of the NCA-<lb/>
IAW tournament did not<lb/>
mean the Bucs could<lb/>
return to Greenville for<lb/>
rest; the annual Deep<lb/>
South Tournament began<lb/>
immediately after.<lb/>
An opening round 4-0<lb/>
victory over Converse Col-<lb/>
lege Friday afternoon was<lb/>
to be the last of this<lb/>
decade for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates, as they dropped<lb/>
their next two bouts 5-0 to<lb/>
Clemson and 2-0 against<lb/>
Appalachian State.<lb/>
Zwigard, Carol Bel-<lb/>
cher, Sandy Adams and<lb/>
Donna Nicholson provided<lb/>
the offensive punch for the<lb/>
Converse victory.<lb/>
"Dana Salmons was<lb/>
accidentally hit in the face<lb/>
with a stick and Zwigard<lb/>
See FIELD HOCKEY,<lb/>
psge 11<lb/>
game at seven.<lb/>
The Pirates then took the ensuing kickoff and<lb/>
marched downfield for a go-ahead Bill Lamm field goal<lb/>
at the end of the half. Lamm's 39-yard boot gave ECU a<lb/>
scant 10-7 lead over the underdog Mountaineers at the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
The second half was a different story for the Pirates,<lb/>
who had been frustrated in the first half by a confusing<lb/>
ASU defense.<lb/>
"It seemed like they used every defense in the<lb/>
world noted ECU quarterback Green.<lb/>
It took the Pirates less than one minute to get on the<lb/>
board in the third period. A quick 65-yard drive was<lb/>
capped by Theodore Sutton's 28-yard run. Lamm's<lb/>
extra-point put the Pirates on top 17-7.<lb/>
It was pretty much clear sailing for the Pirates after<lb/>
that, as their wishbone began to click with the efficiency<lb/>
that was absent in the first half. The Pirates used two<lb/>
long drives in the final half, of 75 and 89 yards, to put<lb/>
the Mountaineers away.<lb/>
"We definitely executed better in the second half<lb/>
said ECU coach Pat Dye. "We kinda tried to hit some of<lb/>
their soft spots rather than their hard ones. Wee did a<lb/>
lot of automaticing on the line of scrimmage<lb/>
Fullback Sutton, who gained 97 of h ???$?<lb/>
yards in the second half, said the P.rate game plan in<lb/>
he final half suited him perfectly. We ??"?.? ?<lb/>
minds that we would run the ball straight at them, sam<lb/>
The burly Kinston native. "A lot of the traps that I ran<lb/>
n the firs, half did no. work, so ,n the ?- ?<lb/>
ran a lot of read plays. It was up to Uander to make<lb/>
decisions as to what we did ,<lb/>
Another big factor in the big Pirate s??dJf ?<lb/>
the play of the offensive line. "Our line really blew<lb/>
them out said sutton. "They're a great unit<lb/>
A biK plus for the Pirates on this chilly afternoon<lb/>
also was8 the fact that they committed no turnover-<lb/>
"We kept the ball away from them and I m miglm<lb/>
proud of our offense for that said Dye.<lb/>
P Meanwhile, the Pirate defense forced four<lb/>
Mountaineer turnovers. Cornerback Charlie Carter<lb/>
sparkled with an interception of a Steve Brown pass and<lb/>
a fumble recovery. n<lb/>
Though he was obviously proud of his troops, Uye<lb/>
seemed to dwell on the Appalachian offense as, he spoke<lb/>
to reporters after game. "I'd rather play North Carolina<lb/>
ten times that to play this bunch fivet.mes said Dye<lb/>
"Their offense is awesome. I'm awfully glad to get cut<lb/>
of here alive<lb/>
Valentine adjusts to NFL<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Being a rookie in the National Football League is not<lb/>
easy. It is especially not easy for one who must try to<lb/>
make it on a team that is the defending Super Bowl<lb/>
champions. But for one Zack Valentine, the challenge<lb/>
was a welcome one.<lb/>
Selected in the second round of last year's NFL draft<lb/>
by the world champion Pittsburg Steelers, ex-East<lb/>
Carolina defensive end Valentine faced the difficult task<lb/>
in training camp of making the squad at the linebacker<lb/>
position, a position where the Steelers were loaded. But<lb/>
make the team is exactly what Valentine did. Since that<lb/>
time he has been a big help to the team in more wa s<lb/>
than one.<lb/>
"It was really tough making the team said<lb/>
Valentine via telephone last week. "But I'm glad I<lb/>
ended up here bacause I want to play with the best in<lb/>
the league<lb/>
The Steelers, drafted the 6-3 215-pound Valentine<lb/>
strictly for duty at linebacker. At first glance, the<lb/>
Zack Valentine<lb/>
thoughts of making the Steeler team must have been<lb/>
frightening for Valentine. Already on the Pittsburgh<lb/>
Squad at that position were All-Pros Jack Ham and Jack<lb/>
Lambert along with seasoned pros like Lawrence Toews,<lb/>
Robin cole and Dennis Winston.<lb/>
"It did look a little crowded at linebacker when I first<lb/>
got here said Valentine. "There's no doubt that the<lb/>
Steelers have the best linebacking crew in pro football<lb/>
After making the team, Big Zack had to devote his<lb/>
time into becoming the best linebacker he possibly<lb/>
could. The job was quite a transition, as he had never<lb/>
played anything but defensive end at ECU.<lb/>
The transition, said Valentine, has been rather,<lb/>
smooth. "The biggest thing he said, "is that in<lb/>
college all my movement at defensive end was forward<lb/>
and here in the pros all my movement at linebacker is<lb/>
lateral, from side to side.<lb/>
"I've had to learn to drop on the blitzes and all like<lb/>
that. It was kinda tough at first, though<lb/>
Steeler coaches are pleased with Zack's progress at<lb/>
'his new position. "Zack's doing very will for a rookie,<lb/>
said Pittburgh defensive coordinator Woody Widenfofer.<lb/>
"We have such a complex defense that it is very<lb/>
difficult for a rookie to develop, especially a linebacker<lb/>
Valentine has more experience at this point that he<lb/>
expected at first due to the large number of injuries at<lb/>
linebacker that the Steelers had earlier this season.<lb/>
"They used me a lot on Blitzes during that time said<lb/>
Valentine , "in order to utilize my speed<lb/>
At least one time, the Valentine blitz paid off.<lb/>
Several weeks ago, with the Steelers playing Denver on<lb/>
Monday Night Football, the Edenton native hurried into<lb/>
the Bronco backfield and sacked quarterback Craig<lb/>
Morton.<lb/>
"That has to be my biggest thrill so far said<lb/>
Valentine, "because I was all alone in the spotlight<lb/>
On the play, the ABC-TV announcers referred to<lb/>
Valentine after the sack as "Zack Valentine from East<lb/>
Colorado State an error that enfuriated many ECU<lb/>
fans.<lb/>
"The coaches down there (at ECU) told me what<lb/>
they said Valentine said. "But with a little experience<lb/>
everyone will know me as Zack Valentine from East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Valentine says the Steelers have "big plans" for<lb/>
him. "If they didn't he said assuredly, "they would<lb/>
not have drafted me as high as they did<lb/>
"We difinitely expect Zack to be a starter someday<lb/>
said Widenfofer. "He has excellent potential and it is<lb/>
only a matter of time for him<lb/>
Valentine realizes, though, that for now he must<lb/>
wait. "I feel like I will start here someday he said.<lb/>
"But with the caliber of players that we have here, you<lb/>
have to wait your turn. The guys ahead of me have done<lb/>
the same thing. Hey, I'm with the best, you know<lb/>
Being with the best is a big thrill for Valentine, who<lb/>
says the Steelers are probably the best and most<lb/>
confident team in the NFL. "There is a lot of intensity<lb/>
on this team. They all know what it takes to wm and<lb/>
they go out on the field and do it. Everybody here feels<lb/>
that the only thing that can stop the Steelers from<lb/>
winning the Super Bowl is the Steelers themselves<lb/>
Valentine pointed to the intense practices that the<lb/>
Steelers have, as compared to other teams who<lb/>
"practice to get it over with "We do a lot of<lb/>
classwork said Zack, "a lot more than in college. It's<lb/>
sort of like going to classes at school. Then we take<lb/>
what we learned in class and put it to use on the<lb/>
practice field<lb/>
One thing that makes Valentine happy about practice<lb/>
is the fact that the Steelers have designed several plays<lb/>
on the special teams especially for him. 'They have<lb/>
some plays just for me he said. "They do a lot for me<lb/>
anyway. They really are dedicated to making me the<lb/>
best that I can be<lb/>
"We have designed a play on the extra-points and<lb/>
field goals explained Coach Widenfofer, "Especially<lb/>
for Zack to block the kick. We thry to take advantage of<lb/>
his exceptional leaping ability<lb/>
Valentine says that he has learned a great deal in the<lb/>
world of pro football but that some things he learned at<lb/>
ECU under head coach Pat Dye will always stick with<lb/>
him. "Coach Dye stressed being mentally alert at all<lb/>
times he said. "That will always stay with me. He<lb/>
also always wanted his team to 'play together Coach<lb/>
(Chuck) Noll wants the same thing here<lb/>
valentine said that he is still following the Pirates<lb/>
quite avidly, as a matter of fact, he was watching the<lb/>
Arkansas-Houston game on television a couple of weeks<lb/>
ago while the Pirates were facing arch-rival North<lb/>
Carolina when Pirate score was flashed on the screen.<lb/>
"The score read East Carolina 24, North Carolina 21<lb/>
in the fourth quarter Valentine said, "and I jumped<lb/>
straight up out of my chair and yelled 'I knew we would<lb/>
win I knew we would win Then I went downstairs<lb/>
and told some of the guys on the team what my old<lb/>
school was doing.<lb/>
"When I came back upstairs to my TV, the game<lb/>
was over and it was a 24-24 tie. I sure was disappointed<lb/>
and I know the team was too<lb/>
Valentine surely soon forgot that disappointment,<lb/>
though, and went on with the business of being a<lb/>
professional football player. He spoke of his goals.<lb/>
"Someday, before I retire, I'd like to make All-Pro.<lb/>
And, of course, this year I'd like to play in the Super<lb/>
Bowl<lb/>
With his enthusiasm and the Steeler organization on<lb/>
his side, both seem like real possibilities.<lb/>
???<lb/>
I<lb/>
now a Steeler linebacker<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0009"/><lb/>
6 Novemoec tatf lrt tAbl hLihm. ray <lb/>
bUms closing in on 1,000 yards<lb/>
'It's like a dream come true for me<lb/>
 ho?N Collins said it but everyone knows Pat Dye<lb/>
,j jusl as easily have uttered those words<lb/>
lins, the Pirates' star halfback, went over the<lb/>
.yard mark for the season last Saturday with his<lb/>
l-yard performance against Appalachian. His 802<lb/>
i- make him the nation's 20th leading rusher with an<lb/>
b-age oi 102.0 per game.<lb/>
I junior from Pern, Yan, N.Y. could easily move<lb/>
L up the ist with a big game this weekend against<lb/>
limond. He ? only 12 yards behind Thomas Vigorito<lb/>
irginia, who ranks 16th. Last year's Heisman Trophy<lb/>
iner, Bill) Sims of Oklahoma, is 12th on the list with<lb/>
yards, only V7 more than Collins. Both have played<lb/>
I games and have three remaining.<lb/>
I illins also ranks high in the nation in all-purpose<lb/>
jning. His 150.9 yards per game rank him fifth in the<lb/>
i m this category. Ceorge Rogers of South<lb/>
i.lma is jusl ahead of him at 156.2. Charles White's<lb/>
5 average leads the nation.<lb/>
Collins now has 1,376 yards for his career. Should he<lb/>
?ver the 1.000 yard mark this season, and he has<lb/>
t games to do it. he would move into the tenth spot<lb/>
B. c all-time ECU rushers.<lb/>
lib- would become only the fourth back in Pirate<lb/>
his to go over 1,000 yards in one season. Carlester<lb/>
Crn npler did in 172 and 1973. Dave Alexander and<lb/>
Bu olson also eclipsed the magic mark during their<lb/>
EC<lb/>
NOTHER PIRATE BACK, fullback Theodore<lb/>
Sut i- already in the ECU top ten. With his 134<lb/>
yai igainst Appalachian Saturday, Sutton pushed his<lb/>
se? V v2 and his career mark to 1,889. That<lb/>
figi As him sixth on the all-time list. Crumpler tops<lb/>
the " with 2.88') yards. Eddie Hicks, now a New York<lb/>
Gin is just ahead of Sutton in fifth place with 2,101.<lb/>
Re I his first year, Sutton could possibly return to<lb/>
pla r the Pirates again next season with his sights set<lb/>
on Crumpler's all-time mark.<lb/>
<lb/>
?THE PIRATES LEAD the nation in fewest turnovers<lb/>
with ten after eight games. Dartmouth, last week's<lb/>
Iea . has committed only eleven and ranks second.<lb/>
he amazing thing about ECU leading the country in<lb/>
itegory is the fact that the Pirates are a wishbone<lb/>
Deacons ranked<lb/>
Oth in AP poll<lb/>
and you don't figure<lb/>
Tennessee is going to lose<lb/>
to them at home. And<lb/>
 irginia<lb/>
Yes. Virginia, Virginia<lb/>
went down to Georgia and<lb/>
did in those Bulldog No,<lb/>
they didn't just do them<lb/>
in, thev beat them 31-0.<lb/>
team, which usually spells out numerous turnovers as<lb/>
the option offense affords many fumble opportunities.<lb/>
<lb/>
THE "PIRATE OFFENSE as a whole continues to stay<lb/>
among the national leaders. ECU ranks fourth nationally<lb/>
in rushing offense with an average of 334.6 yards per<lb/>
game, seventh in total offense, averaging 443 yards and<lb/>
14th in scoring offense with an average of 30.1 points<lb/>
per contest.<lb/>
Many school records are likely to fall before the<lb/>
Pirates complete their season at William and Mary on<lb/>
November 21. The team is only 586 yards away from the<lb/>
all-time single season rushing mark of 3,263, set in<lb/>
1976. With tliree games left, this figure should be easily<lb/>
eclipsed, as should the total offense record of 4,245<lb/>
which was set in 1973. The Pirates need to gain only 701<lb/>
yards in the final trio of games to break the latter mark.<lb/>
<lb/>
AN INTERESTING ASPECT of Saturday's 38-21<lb/>
victory over Appalachian State for the Pirates was the<lb/>
fact that star end Billy Ray Washington did not<lb/>
touch the football. He faced stiff coverage from the<lb/>
Mountaineer secondary all day. Despite shutting off<lb/>
Washington, the Apps still gave up 544 yards total<lb/>
offense to the Pirate attack.<lb/>
<lb/>
THE PIRATES BLESSED of course with an<lb/>
excellent offensive attack, will get to see the other side<lb/>
of the coin Saturday in Ficklen Stadium when they face<lb/>
the hapless Richmond Spiders. Richmond, 0-9, has<lb/>
scored but 59 points all season long.<lb/>
<lb/>
DAVE ODOM, ECU's new head basketball coach,<lb/>
announced last week that he would unveil the Pirates to<lb/>
the public on Nov. 14 when the squad will play a<lb/>
Purple-Gold scrimmage game. The women's team, led<lb/>
by second-year coach Cathy Andruzzi, will precede the<lb/>
men with a similar scrimmage. The Lady Pirates will<lb/>
begin play at 6:30 with the men's game immediately<lb/>
following. There will be no admission charge for either<lb/>
game.<lb/>
y<lb/>
wA<lb/>
J. 6. Hook<lb/>
Sportswear<lb/>
Dean Sweaters<lb/>
Largest Selection<lb/>
In Town<lb/>
Also new<lb/>
Selection of Kilts<lb/>
Bring Your<lb/>
National<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Consumer<lb/>
Card ,<lb/>
$<lb/>
2<lb/>
Afc<lb/>
u <lb/>
C WEBER FORBES<lb/>
Evans Mall<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
B DICK BR1NSTER<lb/>
As vnited Press Writer<lb/>
blNSTON-SALEM,<lb/>
N.C. P) ? "Are you<lb/>
sayiiu" 're not going to<lb/>
be ran I- ? asked W ake<lb/>
Fore- Coach John Mack-<lb/>
ovic, raising his voh e<lb/>
about a pie sant conve<lb/>
tional let-l tor once.<lb/>
The emphasis was on<lb/>
the word "we're and<lb/>
Mackovic was half joking.<lb/>
His Demon Deacons, the<lb/>
nation new Cinderella<lb/>
team. 1 absorbed a 31-0<lb/>
beati at the hands of<lb/>
Clem- . and retaining a<lb/>
spot among college fool<lb/>
ball - elite was not a major<lb/>
con ?m ii.<lb/>
"1 imagine we'll drop<lb/>
out oi the top 20<lb/>
M k -aid at his<lb/>
Holiday morning press<lb/>
?pntronce.<lb/>
This, 'Mining from the<lb/>
uad football coach at<lb/>
ake Forest, represented<lb/>
t:reat achievement in<lb/>
itself. Later, when the<lb/>
- wore tabulated, the<lb/>
Deacons wound up No. 20<lb/>
in the weekly Associated<lb/>
ess poll of the nation's<lb/>
? g? football writers.<lb/>
i rue, it's the bottom of<lb/>
barrel, but what a<lb/>
barrel! After losing a<lb/>
football game, being<lb/>
iwn away mind you,<lb/>
W ake Forest is still being<lb/>
ntioned with the Ala-<lb/>
Oklahomas and<lb/>
whatnots.<lb/>
And the reason is<lb/>
-imple. Winning football<lb/>
mes, according to Mac-<lb/>
kovic. is no easy task. And<lb/>
that statement comes from<lb/>
a man who inherited a<lb/>
1-10 team last season and<lb/>
brought it home 1-10 in<lb/>
his first try. Now the<lb/>
Deacons are 7-2 and<lb/>
headed for a bowl.<lb/>
"Let me tell you, 7-4 is<lb/>
a pretty good record he<lb/>
said, "and 8-3 is very<lb/>
good. A team that goes<lb/>
9 2 these days is some<lb/>
team, although the alumni<lb/>
might not think so<lb/>
Mackovic long has ex-<lb/>
tolled the virtues of the<lb/>
NCAA's 30-95 scholarship<lb/>
rule, but he believes a<lb/>
general improvement n<lb/>
the quality of football<lb/>
staffs is another major<lb/>
reason for the leveling out<lb/>
of play.<lb/>
He points to a number<lb/>
of shocking results in<lb/>
support of his conclusions.<lb/>
"Cincinnati makes Flo-<lb/>
rida State ? and they're<lb/>
ranked what, 6th? ? come<lb/>
from behind to beat them.<lb/>
Rutgers - they beat<lb/>
Tennessee down there,<lb/>
(Photo by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
Theodore Sutton36 increases his career rushing mark<lb/>
? 1977 Brewed by Milter Brewing Co Milwaukee Wl USA<lb/>
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sell. For more information<lb/>
call 752-5422.<lb/>
pereoncKj)<lb/>
PART TIME: position<lb/>
available for mature per-<lb/>
sons who like children and<lb/>
enjoy meeting the public.<lb/>
To work at Santaland at<lb/>
Carolina East Mall. Nov.<lb/>
3-Dec. 24must be avail-<lb/>
able to work the entire<lb/>
season. Interested? Call:<lb/>
Kay Sckenck at 756-6851.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Wait-<lb/>
resses, bartenders, bar<lb/>
backs. Apply in person.<lb/>
Must be 21. Good pay plus<lb/>
tips. Call 756-8060.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Call<lb/>
Cvnthia anytime after 5<lb/>
p.m. at 758-4693.<lb/>
NEED X-TRA CASH: Fair<lb/>
prices paid for gold and<lb/>
silver and silver coins.<lb/>
Mixed Media. 120 E. 5th<lb/>
St. 758-2127.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: To and<lb/>
from Plymouth. Anytime.<lb/>
Will help with expenses.<lb/>
Call 752-8043.<lb/>
LOST: Eastern Waye High<lb/>
Class ring, year 1976.<lb/>
Reward Offered. Call 758-<lb/>
6084<lb/>
IN A STORE NOT BUT A FEW UGHT YEARS AWAY<lb/>
YOU CAN EXPERIENCE<lb/>
'D.A. KELLY'S<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
mrit 9<lb/>
BLAST OFF WITH SKY-ROCKETING VALUES THIS WEEK AT<lb/>
D.A. KELLY'S, ESPECIALLY PROGRAMMED TO PROVIDE YOU WITH<lb/>
YOUR PRESENT AND FUTURE WARDROBE NEEDS<lb/>
WITH A $20 OR MORE PURCHASE YOU CAN STEP INTO THE<lb/>
D.A.KELLY FLYING SAUCER FOR AN OUT-OF-SIGHT FREE GIFT<lb/>
ROOMMATE wanisd to<lb/>
share two bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment. Phone 752-7202.<lb/>
PARKING: Leased parking<lb/>
directly across from ECU<lb/>
on corner of 5th and E.<lb/>
Holly Sts. $30 per semes-<lb/>
ter. 30 spaces available.<lb/>
Call Bull Ritter Realtors<lb/>
756-5458 and leave name<lb/>
and number if interested.<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
THERE WILL BE DISCOUNTS FAR BEYOND YOUR<lb/>
IMAGINATION ON LUREX, FLANNEL, AND PLAID<lb/>
SKIRTS AND BELTS.<lb/>
WoHnoeHau DISCOVERS D.A. KELLY'S ATOMOSPHERE<lb/>
weunebudy floating with sales 30off all reg. price<lb/>
DRESSES.<lb/>
VISIT<lb/>
CENTRAL NEWS &amp; CARD SHOP<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Local &amp; out of town papers<lb/>
Hardback &amp; paperback books<lb/>
Complete Selection of magazines<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
321 Evans St.<lb/>
752-3333<lb/>
HOURS 9-9<lb/>
7 DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
LANDS EARTH SHAKING METEORS CRASHING FAR<lb/>
OUT VALUES OF 25 OFF ALL REG. PRICE SKIRTS<lb/>
AND DEEP WITHIN THE GALAXY THERE WILL BE A<lb/>
SPECIAL VISITOR FROM A PLANET UNKNOWN TO<lb/>
ASSIST YOU THROUGH A LIVE WRQR<lb/>
REMOTE 3:00-5:00.<lb/>
NOV. Oth AN UNLIMITED AMOUNT OF 20-40 OFF<lb/>
SALES WILL BE ANNOUNCED EVERY 30 MINUTES.<lb/>
WILL END THE LONG JOURNEY OF D.A. KELLY'S<lb/>
SPACE ADVENTURES WITH SHOOTING STAR<lb/>
VALUES OF 30 OFF SELECTED TOPS AND 25<lb/>
OFF ALL VELOUR SWEATERS<lb/>
DON'T MISS YOUR SPACE SHIP TO WITNESS<lb/>
THESE SHOCKING FUTURE VALUESI!<lb/>
.<lb/>
V<lb/>
V<lb/>
?M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 6 November 1979<lb/>
1M team handball begins<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Intramural Correspondent<lb/>
The Intramural Team<lb/>
Handball season got off to<lb/>
an exciting start Wed<lb/>
Oct. 31. Team handball, a<lb/>
relatively new sport at<lb/>
ECU, is rapidly gaining<lb/>
popularity.<lb/>
There is a field of 30<lb/>
teams this year, 23 of<lb/>
which are men's teams<lb/>
.with seven teams vying<lb/>
for the women's cham-<lb/>
pionship.<lb/>
In the men's division,<lb/>
the King's Royal Netters<lb/>
were the preseason num-<lb/>
ber one choice. Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta I received top billing<lb/>
in the women's bracket.<lb/>
The men's fraternity<lb/>
league is divided into two<lb/>
divisions. In the Hercules<lb/>
Division, Tau Kappa Epsi-<lb/>
lon is back to defend their<lb/>
all-campus championship.<lb/>
They defeated Sigma Nu<lb/>
16-5 in their first game.<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha crush-<lb/>
ed Kappa Sigma, 21-11, in<lb/>
a very impressive start.<lb/>
The Zeus Division ap-<lb/>
pears to be very balanced.<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma edged<lb/>
Kappa Alpha, 14-13, in<lb/>
their first game while Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau won by default<lb/>
over Delta Sigma Phi.<lb/>
The dorm division has<lb/>
not started play yet. Play<lb/>
opens today. The Scott<lb/>
Withdrawals and Belk<lb/>
Gola figure to be the<lb/>
strong teams in the<lb/>
division.<lb/>
The Independent divis-<lb/>
ion appears to have the<lb/>
largest number of strong<lb/>
teams. In their first game,<lb/>
the top-ranked King's<lb/>
Roval Netters slipped past<lb/>
the Ball Slingers, 17-14, in<lb/>
a surprisingly close game.<lb/>
The Renegades upset the<lb/>
previously fourth-ranked<lb/>
Doiemites, 13-10. Also,<lb/>
the Six Killers looked<lb/>
impressive in downing Phi<lb/>
Epsilon Kappa, 12-9. Se-<lb/>
cond ranked Alien re-<lb/>
ceived an opening round<lb/>
bye.<lb/>
Recently, several<lb/>
members of the Fitness<lb/>
club have been competing<lb/>
in varous events. Bob FOx<lb/>
and Bob Morrison com-<lb/>
peted in the Fourth<lb/>
Annual Marine Corps<lb/>
Marathon in Washington,<lb/>
D.C. The marathon was a<lb/>
26.2 mile course. Fox and<lb/>
Morrison finished in the<lb/>
top eight percent with<lb/>
times of 3:04.<lb/>
Nancy Mize is involved<lb/>
in the Raleigh Racquetball<lb/>
Tournament while Wayne<lb/>
Edwards, Nancy Mize,<lb/>
Bob Fox, Bob Gutwals,<lb/>
Emory Ramsey, Pat Cox,<lb/>
Maureen Fox, Ken Mur-<lb/>
ray, Linda Mason, and<lb/>
Tony Guiterrey are in the<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Seven Miler.<lb/>
Adaptive Intramurals<lb/>
The Adaptive Intramu-<lb/>
ral Program will get<lb/>
underway on Thurs Nov.<lb/>
8, at 9 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
A variety of activities<lb/>
have been scheduled in-<lb/>
cluding floor hockey,<lb/>
horseshoes, basketball,<lb/>
and volleyball.<lb/>
All interested persons<lb/>
are encouraged to come<lb/>
and join the fun. For<lb/>
additional information,<lb/>
please call Ms. Mize or<lb/>
Vanessa Higdon at 757-<lb/>
6387.<lb/>
Dates and Deadlines<lb/>
The Intramural Council<lb/>
Meeting will be held<lb/>
Thurs Nov. 8, at 4 p.m.<lb/>
in Memorial Gym, Room<lb/>
104.<lb/>
Racquetball Singles<lb/>
entrv deadline is Nov. 8,<lb/>
with Captain's meeting<lb/>
being held Nov. 2 a t 4<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial 104.<lb/>
Plav begins Nov. 13.<lb/>
Co-Rec Volleyball entry<lb/>
deadline is Nov. 7. Cap-<lb/>
tain's Meeting will be held<lb/>
Nov. 8 at 7 p.m in<lb/>
Memorial 104 with play<lb/>
beginning NOv. 12.<lb/>
Pre-season basketball<lb/>
Tournament registration<lb/>
begins Nov. 12.<lb/>
The women's and<lb/>
men's team handball clubs<lb/>
will meet on Thurs Oct.<lb/>
8, at 3:30 p.m. in 104<lb/>
Memorial Gym. All inter-<lb/>
ested students are encour-<lb/>
aged to attend this impor-<lb/>
tant meeting.<lb/>
In the women's league,<lb/>
an exciting race is shaping<lb/>
up as the stronger teams<lb/>
dominated play in the<lb/>
opening round. The<lb/>
fourth-ranked Fleming<lb/>
Goalie Trotters trounced<lb/>
ALpha Xi Delta, II, 21-0,<lb/>
while the second ranked<lb/>
Tyler Heartbreakers hum-<lb/>
bled Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
19-1. P.E. and Company<lb/>
defeated Carries Unmen-<lb/>
tionables 15-6.<lb/>
Top-ranked Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta I received an<lb/>
opening round bye.<lb/>
Players of the week are<lb/>
Larry Fike, King's Royal<lb/>
Netters with five goals and<lb/>
Anita Marsh, Fleming<lb/>
Goalie Trotters scoring 10<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
The top five men's<lb/>
teams are King's Royal<lb/>
Netters heading the list<lb/>
with Alien coming in<lb/>
second and Renegades,<lb/>
third. Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
and Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
round off the list.<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta I is<lb/>
holding the number one<lb/>
position in the -women's<lb/>
league<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Quality Shoe Repair<lb/>
The Minority Arts Film Series<lb/>
presents<lb/>
m&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
imntmutit<lb/>
SMh<lb/>
1RW<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
All Day Hump<lb/>
Day<lb/>
Taco's 29<lb/>
wm<lb/>
un Fi'&amp;ht Inflation) MigMt<lb/>
25 A&amp;M OTHfcR Specials<lb/>
LAOlCS FRfcfc AMiSSioN<lb/>
fcftiNG MICKEL.S<lb/>
L - DANJCg. CoKT?ST<lb/>
VQk CSH -FIRST PfttXE<lb/>
&amp;m<lb/>
doniaWright Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center<lb/>
Wed Nov. 7<lb/>
8pm<lb/>
STUDENT UWON<lb/>
EAST CAKOUNA UMVEftSiTY<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
AST CAROLINA UNIWlRSITt<lb/>
Coupons Expire Nov. 10.<lb/>
Please have coupons clipped.<lb/>
"Home of Greenville's Best Meats'<lb/>
Located on corner 3rd and Jarvis St.<lb/>
"A" Whole Fryers $J<lb/>
Delta Paper Towels<lb/>
Giant Roll<lb/>
3$1.00<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
Qt. Btl.<lb/>
28<lb/>
Plus Deposit<lb/>
Pride of the Farm Vegetables<lb/>
White Potatoes, Lima Beans, or Golden Corn<lb/>
303 cans<lb/>
Golden Bananas<lb/>
4 Lbs<lb/>
4$1.00<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Green Cabbage QLb'<lb/>
Fab Detergent<lb/>
Giant Box 88 witn tnis coupon<lb/>
and $7.50 food order excluding<lb/>
specials. $1.08 without coupon<lb/>
Clorox Bleach<lb/>
12 Gal. Jug 38with this coupon<lb/>
and $7.50 food order excluding<lb/>
specials. 58' without coupon.<lb/>
'<lb/>
Charmin Tissue<lb/>
4 Roll Pkg.68 wit" this coupon<lb/>
and $7.50 food order excluding<lb/>
specials. 88' without coupon.<lb/>
?<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
10 Discount on $10<lb/>
or more food order<lb/>
Expires Nov. 10<lb/>
Amt. off Purchase<lb/>
I ID Number<lb/>
?saS<lb/>
limit one per order i<lb/>
ar?T.<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
? s<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0011"/><lb/>
6 Noember 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 11<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
(Photos by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
 ECU tackle Joe Godette (77) blocks for FB Theodore Sutton, ASU QB Brown goes down and ASU HB Albert Floyd dives forward in 38-21 ECU victory Saturday.<lb/>
Thompson, Lady Pirates dominate Peace in scrimmage<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
ECU Lady Pirate bas-<lb/>
ketball opened its home<lb/>
exhibition schedule Mon-<lb/>
dav against an outmanned<lb/>
Peace College squad,<lb/>
soundly defeating the vis-<lb/>
itors in each of three 20<lb/>
m.nute periods.<lb/>
Perennial team scoring<lb/>
leader Rosie Thompson led<lb/>
the Lady Bucs with 30<lb/>
points, though she was<lb/>
platooned throughout the<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Junior guard Lydia<lb/>
Rountree added 22, fol-<lb/>
lowed by freshman for-<lb/>
ward Mary Denkler with<lb/>
14 and junior college<lb/>
transfer Kathv Riley with<lb/>
13.<lb/>
Junior point guard<lb/>
Laurie Sikes and freshman<lb/>
forward Donna Brayboy<lb/>
added 12 each.<lb/>
Each of the twelve<lb/>
squad members participat-<lb/>
ed in the Scrimmage, and<lb/>
each exhibited her own<lb/>
characteristics and playing<lb/>
style.<lb/>
Thompson showed that<lb/>
she was ready to pick up<lb/>
where she left off in the<lb/>
1978-79 season; leading all<lb/>
Lady Pirate scorers with<lb/>
1774 points and bring<lb/>
attention to the ECU<lb/>
program.<lb/>
The limelight will have<lb/>
to be shared this year,<lb/>
however. Rountree and<lb/>
Girven, the only other<lb/>
starters returning, have<lb/>
improved considerably du-<lb/>
ring the hiatus.<lb/>
Rountree takes on a<lb/>
new assignment after serv-<lb/>
ing as the point guard last<lb/>
season. She will play the<lb/>
shooting guard position<lb/>
and the point slot will be<lb/>
filled by Sikes and speedy<lb/>
Lillion Barnes.<lb/>
"I think that Sikes and<lb/>
Lillion are doing much<lb/>
better than they did<lb/>
earlier said second-year<lb/>
Lady Pirate Coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi. "She's (Sikes) a<lb/>
natural ball handler.<lb/>
"Lydia is a real threat<lb/>
from outside and she has<lb/>
become a better team<lb/>
player<lb/>
The addition of Sikes<lb/>
gives ECU an added<lb/>
dimension that was sorely<lb/>
missed last season; a<lb/>
dazzling ballhandler with a<lb/>
record of success including<lb/>
being named All-Region<lb/>
Junior College AIAW.<lb/>
"I think Laurie has<lb/>
relieved a lot of the<lb/>
pressure from Lydia said<lb/>
assistant coach Marcia<lb/>
Richards. "The thing I'm<lb/>
really worried about is that<lb/>
we're not getting the ball<lb/>
to the high post enough<lb/>
The post again will be<lb/>
anchored by the lanky<lb/>
Girven (6-0, 135), but her<lb/>
backup will be considerab-<lb/>
ly more dependable than<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
Fellow six-footer Donna<lb/>
Moody will be the top<lb/>
reserve, with Denkler able<lb/>
to see spot action at<lb/>
center, also.<lb/>
"We're trying to get to<lb/>
where we can platoon the<lb/>
girls said Andruzzi. "I<lb/>
liked what I saw tonight<lb/>
(Monday).<lb/>
"I think Marcia is<lb/>
much more physical than<lb/>
she has been in the past.<lb/>
Having the freshmen who<lb/>
can come off the bench<lb/>
makes a big difference<lb/>
Riley and Thompson<lb/>
appear to have the starting<lb/>
slots filled at forward, but<lb/>
from there it's a toss-up.<lb/>
"Riley is a real hust-<lb/>
ler Andruzzi said. "She<lb/>
always gives everything<lb/>
she's got. She's a very<lb/>
strong player.<lb/>
"When Rosie's playing<lb/>
with better ballplayers like<lb/>
she is this year, then she<lb/>
plays better<lb/>
Transfer Heidi Owen,<lb/>
Brayboy and walk-ons<lb/>
Sandy Reneiri and Fran<lb/>
Hooks will share the<lb/>
chores at forward.<lb/>
Andruzzi pointed out<lb/>
several areas which the<lb/>
Lady Pirates will have to<lb/>
improve upon before the<lb/>
season opener November<lb/>
17 against William and<lb/>
Mary.<lb/>
"We made them<lb/>
(Peace) play out style of<lb/>
game she said. "They<lb/>
weren't able to fast break<lb/>
against us.<lb/>
"Our fast break begat<lb/>
to look better, but they<lb/>
were giving us the first<lb/>
option and we weren't<lb/>
setting up the offense and<lb/>
working the ball around as<lb/>
much as we want the girls<lb/>
to.<lb/>
"We're going to have<lb/>
to become a much more<lb/>
patient team on offense,<lb/>
and defense too for that<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
"We've got to gain a<lb/>
lot more speed.<lb/>
"Defensively we were<lb/>
working on the transition<lb/>
from our man-to-man to<lb/>
the zone and I think it was<lb/>
very good<lb/>
Sikes dazzled the<lb/>
crowd with around-the-<lb/>
back passes and 20-foot<lb/>
jump shots<lb/>
Field hockey<lb/>
Cont'd from page 8<lb/>
i<lb/>
suffered a foot injury in<lb/>
the Clemson game said<lb/>
Holmes. "Before the<lb/>
weekend was over, I think<lb/>
everybody had an injury of<lb/>
some kind or another.<lb/>
"I think the teams<lb/>
were pretty evenly ba-<lb/>
lanced, though. We<lb/>
weren't as aggressive<lb/>
inside the circle as we<lb/>
should have been against<lb/>
Clemson and I think that<lb/>
made the difference<lb/>
Arrants explained that<lb/>
for the NCAIAW tourna-<lb/>
ment to be completed<lb/>
prior to the Regional<lb/>
Tournament, it had to be<lb/>
played the same week as<lb/>
the Deep South.<lb/>
"I would have liked to<lb/>
have done better against<lb/>
Clemson and Appalachian<lb/>
State she said, "but<lb/>
you've got to remember it<lb/>
was our fifth and sixth<lb/>
games and only their<lb/>
second and third.<lb/>
"The girls were really<lb/>
exhausted when we got<lb/>
back. It was nice to see<lb/>
the girls come on so<lb/>
strong at the end of the<lb/>
season. We return all but<lb/>
two to compete next<lb/>
year<lb/>
The season is not quite<lb/>
over for three standout<lb/>
ECU performers.<lb/>
Wendy Kennedy and<lb/>
Carol Belcher were selec-<lb/>
ted after Deep South<lb/>
competition to compete in<lb/>
the No. II m which will<lb/>
compete this weekend at<lb/>
the regionals in Towson,<lb/>
Maryland. Dana Salmons<lb/>
was also chosen to com-<lb/>
pete with the No. Ill team.<lb/>
Teams in the regionals<lb/>
are comprised of club<lb/>
team members and college<lb/>
team members.<lb/>
Pantana Bob's<lb/>
The brothers of Pi Kappa Phi would like to<lb/>
thank these sponsers of the 3rd<lb/>
Annual Halloween Festival !<lb/>
U. B. E.<lb/>
528 Cotanche St.<lb/>
Complete selection of<lb/>
Greek Jerseys<lb/>
only $7.50 ea.<lb/>
Silk Screens<lb/>
Pizza Inn<lb/>
South Sea Pet Shop<lb/>
Stereo Village<lb/>
Sonic Drive - In<lb/>
Crow's Nest<lb/>
The Pro Shop<lb/>
Sharpe's Formal Wear<lb/>
Wine &amp; Cheese Shop<lb/>
Radio Shack<lb/>
TREE House Restaurant<lb/>
H. L. Hodges<lb/>
Mikes' Bike Shop<lb/>
Post Halloween Party with the Pi Kaps<lb/>
at Pantana Bob's 8:30-ffim.Tonight<lb/>
Prizes<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 THE EAST CAROL INIAN 6 November 1979<lb/>
THE E.C.U. FRATERNITIES<lb/>
AND SORORITIES<lb/>
PRESENT THE3rd OF 4<lb/>
GREAT GREEK CONCERTS<lb/>
WED. NOV. 7th 8:45l:00<lb/>
AT THE ATTIC<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
m-<lb/>
WEAR YOUR GREEK<lb/>
JERSEY'S AND RECIEVE<lb/>
A REDUCTION<lb/>
<pb facs="00057229_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>